
Risking the Dream
Since I was 6 years old, I wanted to write. It started out when I dreamed of creating fictional worlds
When you’re the sort of person who needs to say things out loud (even under your breath) in order to think them through, you eventually discover that writing is the most reliable way to get clarity.
Writing gives me the space to slow down, examine an idea from different angles, and refine it before sharing it with another human being. Over time it became less about publishing and more about thinking.
A side benefit is that it forces you to become very clear and meticulous.
My writing actually started when I was around eight years old, trying to imitate the kinds of stories I loved to read. Thankfully (for you) none of those early attempts are reproduced here.
Over the years, my writing evolved into something more useful: a brainstorming tool, a mechanism to explore ideas, and a practical process for building systems and generating solutions.
You’ll find two kinds of writing here:
Personal Reflections — essays about ideas, systems, leadership, and the strange ways complexity shows up in everyday life.
Business Tools — practical frameworks and thinking tools that have proven useful in real work.
I hope you find something useful here.

Since I was 6 years old, I wanted to write. It started out when I dreamed of creating fictional worlds

I have a problem. I like to think of myself as this really open and friendly person. Totally non-judgmental and

Have you ever had one of those moments where from one second to the next you feel such a strong

This is how bureaucracy forms—not because people intend to create it, but because complexity accumulates over time.

It usually starts with a lack of clarity. Everyone assumes alignment. But there isn’t any…

At first, fixing makes sense. It’s faster, cheaper, and less disruptive. You patch the issue, move forward, and keep things
If you have a burning question or urgent problem, or if you’d like to check my availability for your event, drop me a line.