I design systems that liberate potential — not manage constraints.

As a fourth-generation Vermonter with Peruvian roots, I've always existed between worlds—belonging nowhere and everywhere. This duality shapes how I see systems: not as rigid structures, but as living ecosystems with untapped potential.

Working at the intersection of operations, culture, and strategy, I architect frameworks that move organizations from performative values to lived experience. My work is about translation: turning vision into infrastructure, aspirational thinking into functional reality.

The landscapes of Vermont taught me resilience and regeneration; my Peruvian heritage showed me community and interconnection. Together, they've formed my approach to systems design—honoring both the pragmatic and the visionary.

While I've operated within the bones of startups, boards, and cooperatives, I'm stepping into a new form—one that blends the clarity of a COO with the creativity of a systems futurist.

I'm particularly drawn to participatory governance, cooperative models, and frameworks that elevate collective intelligence without defaulting to hierarchical control.

I believe the most powerful solutions don't come from optimization—they come from questioning assumptions. From noticing what's invisible inside the system. From being on the edge, at the start, in the messy middle of emergence.

🌐 Vision in Motion

I'm currently prototyping a suite of tools at the intersection of AI, neuroscience, and mysticism—designed to help people visualize and interact with the systems that shape their lives. Think: a dynamic mirror for the soul-system. Tools that make the invisible visible.

From quantum-aligned habit mapping to tracking "winks" from the universe—these aren't productivity hacks. They're designed rituals for rewiring perception, honoring synchronicity, and expanding what's possible.

It's all part of a broader inquiry I'm exploring through my Substack, Field Notes from the Edge: Systems + Good Trouble—a space where systems thinking, spiritual technology, and human flourishing converge.