
About
A life lived at the intersection
Technology and spirituality are often seen as opposing forces. I've spent my life discovering they're not.
The Beginning
I entered the technology industry in the early 2000s, drawn by the possibility of building things that mattered. The energy was intoxicating—the sense that we were shaping the future with every line of code, every product launch, every company built.
And we were. But I didn't yet understand at what cost.
The Questioning
In 2004, something shifted. The external success continued—perhaps even accelerated—but an inner restlessness began that no achievement could quiet. The questions that emerged weren't about how to build better products, but about what building meant in the first place.
What began as an existential crisis became an invitation. I started a parallel journey—one of meditation, contemplation, and deep inquiry into the nature of consciousness, purpose, and meaning.
Two Decades of Integration
For over twenty years now, I've walked both paths simultaneously. Not as escape from one into the other, but as an ongoing integration— bringing the insights of inner work into the creation of outer value.
I've led teams and built products at the highest levels of the tech industry. I've also sat in silence for thousands of hours, worked with teachers across traditions, and explored the edges of what consciousness can reveal about how we work, lead, and live.
A Sense of Responsibility
We stand at an inflection point. The technology we're building— especially AI—will reshape what it means to be human in ways we're only beginning to understand. The people building these systems carry an enormous responsibility.
I believe the most important work of our time is bringing consciousness to creation. Not rejecting technology, but ensuring it emerges from wisdom rather than mere capability. Not abandoning ambition, but grounding it in something deeper than optimization.
This is what I've dedicated my life to. This is what I'm here to help with.