Not what I do. Not the roles I fill. Who I am.
I am a man who belongs to God — not as an idea I affirm, but as the deepest fact about me. Before I am a husband, a father, an engineer, a builder of anything, I am His. That is the foundation everything else rests on, and the thing I most want my life to point back to.
There is a quiet current that runs through everything I do: I see what is scattered, and I want to make it coherent.
Telemetry pipelines, theology, a vault full of notes, a family's daily rhythm — the domain changes, but the impulse doesn't. I am drawn to complexity not because I enjoy chaos, but because I believe things mean something, and meaning becomes visible when you bring order to what's tangled. This is not just a skill. It's how I see the world.
I am most myself in stillness — not emptiness, but the kind of quiet where curiosity has room to move. A passage I'm turning over. A system I'm trying to understand. A question I haven't answered yet. I don't need noise or an audience. I need space to think, and something worth thinking about.
If my daughter grows up and says, "My dad pointed me to God" — that is enough. Not that I was impressive. Not that I built remarkable things. That I lived in a way that made the invisible real to the people closest to me.
I am a builder who must remember that building is not being. I am productive by nature, and I must guard against letting output become identity. The same drive that makes me effective can, unchecked, make me restless — always reaching for the next system to organize, the next tool to build, the next problem to solve. Sabbath, for me, is not just a practice. It is a correction.
I am reflective but not passive. Quiet but not withdrawn. Curious but anchored. These tensions are not contradictions to resolve — they are the shape of who I am.
I am a man made by God, ordered toward His glory, who finds the world full of complexity worth understanding, beauty worth noticing, and people worth pointing toward something greater than myself. I do not need to earn my place. I already have one.