About

Who I am

I didn’t get into accessibility because it sounded noble. I got into it because inaccessible tech made my life harder than it needed to be.

As a blind user, I’ve run into every flavor of broken UI, confused interaction, missing label, and “who thought this was a good idea?” design choice you can imagine. Eventually the frustration turned into curiosity — and the curiosity turned into a skill set.

What I do

I started reverse-engineering what worked, what didn’t, and why. I paid attention to every unexpected screen reader behavior, every friction point, every hidden pattern behind good accessible design. The more I dug in, the clearer one thing became: most accessibility issues aren’t mysteries — they’re fixable, often quickly, if you know where to look and what threads to pull.

My promise

If it’s inaccessible, I’ll spot it. If it’s confusing, I’ll surface it. If it’s broken, I’ll show you exactly how to fix it. I don’t sugarcoat, I don’t hedge, and I don’t bury you in jargon. I explain issues in plain language, I focus on impact, and I give you solutions you can act on today — not theoretical homework for someday.

Why this matters

I believe in work that uplifts human dignity. Accessibility isn’t just a compliance task or a checkbox — it’s a chance to build products that include people across borders, cultures, and identities. When technology works for more people, everyone wins.