I didn’t start at the top. I started at a helpdesk, working a queue one ticket at a time, answering the calls nobody else wanted.
I’ve spent my whole life working against the odds. I grew up in a small town in Upstate New York, a little west of Syracuse, the kind of place that was already dying while I was still learning to ride a bike. The schools were failing. The opportunity was always somewhere else. I figured out early that if I wanted a different life, I’d have to go build it myself.
So in 1995 I bet on myself and moved to North Carolina. No safety net. Just a conviction that I could put myself where the opportunity was and outwork everyone around me.
The Long Way Up
I’m a Gen Xer, which means my life started analog. I watched the digital age arrive in real time, from rotary phones and cassette tapes to the systems I’d eventually spend my career building and running. That front-row seat shaped how I see technology, and it’s why I take none of it for granted.
I learned the craft the long way, which is the only way I trust. Level 1 helpdesk. Then systems. Then engineering. Long nights teaching myself everything I could get my hands on, building not just my skills but my identity as a Systems Engineer. I worked deep in Microsoft platforms and lived in data centers. I ran cloud migrations and Azure modernizations. Eventually I was leading the teams and setting the strategy instead of just executing someone else’s.
Along the way I had leaders who showed me what great leadership looks like, and a few who showed me exactly what it doesn’t. I paid close attention to both. I learned what five-nines uptime actually costs, what it really takes to pass an audit with a perfect score, and how to be trusted with budgets and outcomes that matter.
At some point the work stopped being a job and became a calling. I knew this was my arc. I moved into leadership not to leave the technology behind, but to multiply it through other people.
A Renewed Fire
Then AI arrived, and something I hadn’t felt in years came roaring back. The same restless hunger that kept me up late as a young engineer is back, and I’m building again, hands on the keyboard, designing and shipping AI agents the way I’ve learned everything else: by doing.
That thirst for knowledge has never left me. It’s the one constant across every chapter of this story, and right now it’s burning hotter than it has in a long time.
What I’m Doing Here
I want to change the world of technology, and I want to take people with me. If I can help the next engineer, leader, or founder get better at their craft and bolder in their ambitions, then all of this was worth it. That’s what this blog is for. It’s where I think out loud about AI, infrastructure, leadership, and the future we actually get to build.
And I do all of it for my family. They’re the reason behind the long hours and the bigger goals, every single day.
I came from humble beginnings, and I’m not done climbing. I’m still growing, still chasing the next thing worth understanding. If any of that resonates with you, I’d love for you to come along.