Technology didn’t become important to me by accident.
It became a focus because of how I process the world.
A Different Starting Point
Growing up, I experienced things differently.
As someone with autism, I tend to focus deeply—locking onto systems, patterns, and how things work.
In environments that felt unpredictable or unclear, technology offered something different:
Structure.
Consistency.
Logic.
Early Connection
In a rural town, far from what we would now call a “digital world,” I found my way into technology early.
Devices like the TRS-80 Pocket Computer weren’t just tools.
They were systems I could understand.
That mattered.
Because understanding creates stability.
Why Technology Became My Focus
Technology provided:
- predictable behavior
- clear cause and effect
- the ability to explore without social ambiguity
It became more than an interest.
It became a way to engage with the world.
Where That Led
Over time, that focus expanded.
From early devices to VR, AI, and immersive systems, I continued exploring—not just what technology can do, but how people interact with it.
Because that’s where the real impact is.
Not in the tools themselves—but in how they shape human experience.
A Different Role
Today, I’m not just exploring technology.
I’m working to understand how it can:
- reduce friction for different kinds of minds
- support autonomy
- create environments that adapt to people, instead of forcing people to adapt to them
That’s where my work is focused.
🔄 2026 Update
This perspective directly informs what I’m building with Empathium and Guardian systems.
Technology should not:
- overwhelm
- confuse
- or exclude
It should:
- support understanding
- adapt to individual needs
- make complex systems easier to navigate
Because when systems align with how people actually process the world, everything changes.
Key Insights
- Technology can provide stability in unpredictable environments
- Different cognitive styles interact with systems in different ways
- The value of technology is in how it supports people, not just what it does
- Systems should adapt to users—not the other way around
Guardian Application
A Guardian system could:
- adapt interactions to individual cognitive patterns
- reduce ambiguity in complex systems
- support focus without overload
- create consistent, understandable environments
Tags
- Domain: Human Systems, AI
- Function: Identity, Insight
- Guardian: Emotional Support, Decision Guidance

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