Don’t yuck someone’s yum. You might just learn something—about the project, the process, or the person sitting across from you.
A random video from over 10 years ago changed how I think about craft. Joy, knowledge, taste—shared without ego. Passion isn’t a performance—it’s an invitation.
There’s a quiet kind of discipline in saying no to things that almost fit. You wait. You notice. And once in a while, something clicks.
I’m just some guy. I write these posts full of doubt. But I hit publish anyway. Maybe that’s enough—to show someone it’s okay to begin, even unsure.
Adapt with change, and change feels less disruptive. The setup may shift. The tools may break. But the rhythm? You can still keep going.
Packing isn’t just about stuff. It’s about seeing clearly—what you carry, how it fits, and who you are. One bag at a time, I’m learning how I think.
A team, a spark, a tiny skateboard. I made a surprise gift no one asked for—and no one saw coming. It started with list and ended around a round table.
Spark the idea. Speedrun the test. Share the scrappy demo. It doesn’t have to be perfect—it just has to move the story forward.
The people who shaped me never knew they did. That’s what sparks do—they pass, quietly, from one hand to the next.
Take a beat. Find the groove. And play something that makes people move.
When the work clicks, it’s not just because it’s smart. It’s because it feels right. That’s what everyone remembers. That’s what makes it good.
We underestimate how powerful small tips can be. 5 things I use every day that feel too simple to matter—but quietly changed how I work.
Start with what you can. Keep showing up. The rest will take shape—when it’s ready to take shape.
Every writer has thousands of bad pages in them. The faster you write them out, the sooner you find the good ones.
Persistence isn’t always sweat and sneakers. Sometimes it’s ink and paper — quiet proof that you showed up, and kept going, one page at a time.