I've always liked making things. When I was younger, that meant Lego worlds taking over the living room and endless Minecraft worlds built block by block. The appeal was simple: you could start with nothing, apply imagination and logic, and end up with something that felt like yours.
Software became the natural extension of that. It has the same open-ended space, just without the part where you step on a brick at 2 AM. I've been coding since I was young enough that printing text on a screen felt like a magic trick. Over time, what started as “let's see what this does” gradually turned into a way of understanding the world: patterns, abstractions, the quiet logic behind messy problems.
Outside of code, I tend to follow ideas the way some people follow hiking trails: out of curiosity more than destination. I like learning in the broad sense and letting curiosity set the pace. I value good conversations, good friends, and the occasional late-night gaming session that lasts longer than planned but feels entirely justified.