about me

i started with books before i started with screens.
​
i studied english and world literature, translated literary texts, and spent years obsessing over how a single word can change everything. books, to me, were never just stories, they were beautifully designed systems. structured, paced, edited. a balance of math and art. something to be held, used, and consumed. the ultimate user experience.
​
somewhere between close reading and margin notes, i was also constantly doodling. turning abstract thoughts into lines and shapes felt instinctive. drawing became a way to translate complexity into something tangible, and that translation is what eventually led me to product design.​
i’m an overthinker by nature. i overanalyze sentences, conversations, interfaces, human behavior. i notice patterns. i question structure. i replay interactions in my head and redesign them. product design feels like the most constructive place to put that energy, turning overthinking into clarity, and analysis into systems people can actually use.​
as a student, i hitchhiked with a backpack and too much curiosity. it taught me to read situations quickly, adapt when plans collapse, and trust intuition. in many ways, that was my first lesson in navigating ambiguity, something design constantly asks of us.​
i still doodle. i still overanalyze. this time, it’s part of my profession.