This is the part where I talk about myself.

According to my mom, I was always trying to do things right. I liked order, precision, and knowing how the pieces fit together. I wasn’t the loudest kid in the room, but I remembered everything—names, patterns, tiny details no one else noticed. Still do.

I’ve always been drawn to what lives behind the surface: the systems that organize meaning, the context that gives content shape, the why behind the visual. At one point, that meant memorizing entire timelines of art movements just to understand how one idea led to the next, and at another, spending a lot of time in historical archives.

These days, it means designing digital experiences that feel effortless to use. I help teams bring structure to complexity, map user journeys that actually make sense, and build clarity into every layer—from taxonomy to interface.

I still care about doing things right. Not perfectly—but in a way that helps people feel confident, capable, and maybe even a little delighted.
UX hot takes I will defend. Politely.
• Most people don’t want clever. They want clear.
• Breadcrumbs are underrated.
• “Learn more” is lazy.
• Content is design.
• The “users hate scrolling” myth needs to die already.
• It’s not about how many clicks. It’s about whether the clicks make sense.
Things I enjoy
• A solid Jira ritual and a clear meeting agenda
• Digging in my garden
• LaCroix
• Well-written documentation that answers the question before you ask it
• Interior design
• A FigJam board session
• Naming things with future users in mind
• Knitting, sewing, and crocheting — especially with an audiobook

 
Enough about me. Let's talk about you.
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