Why I travel
Traveling expands the way I see the world. Every new city resets my perspective, challenges my assumptions and shows me how differently people live, think and build their routines.
When I’m in a new country, I notice details: how people pay for things, how they move around, how public spaces work, how products shape behavior. These observations feed directly into my design work. They help me think broader, question defaults and understand what “good product experience” means in different cultures.
Traveling also gives me a sense of scale. It reminds me that the world is bigger than my daily tasks, deadlines and sprints. It keeps my mind flexible and my curiosity alive.
In short:
I travel to expand my worldview, to understand people better and to bring that understanding back into the products I build.