I’ve always been the kind of person who learns by doing. Whether it was fixing broken headphones or wondering how video games worked behind the scenes, I’ve always been curious about the things we use every day but rarely stop to understand. That curiosity turned into a quiet determination: if I don’t know how something works, I’ll figure it out.
In 2017, I stepped into a completely new environment. New country. New people. New everything. But change has never really thrown me off. If anything, it helped me grow. I’ve always been the type to adjust, figure things out, and keep going. That mindset naturally led me to engineering, where learning, building, and problem-solving never stop.
I chose Computer Engineering at TMU and focused heavily on software. Not because it was popular, but because I genuinely wanted to build the kinds of tools I had always imagined. Smart tools. Clean interfaces. Things that are actually useful. I didn’t just want to use great technology. I wanted to create it.
Throughout university, I worked on projects that mixed intelligence with real-world usefulness. Along the way, I met people who pushed me to be better, who challenged how I think, and who made long days a little easier. I’m proud of what I’ve built so far, but even more excited about what’s coming next.
These days, I’m still chasing that same feeling. Whether I’m building AI systems, full-stack platforms, or experimenting with an idea I scribbled down at 2am, I’m all in.