Journeyman is a working canon on systems thinking, ethics, and decision-making, focused on how ideas behave under real-world constraints.
Writing here favors clarity and durability over commentary.
Making SaaS Inconsequential, Practically
This essay argues that systems designed to survive tool churn prioritize stable cores over flexible inputs, whether in software, hardware, or everyday workflows.
Provenance vs. Deletion
This essay contrasts deletion with provenance, arguing that removing high-friction variables to preserve short-term order often destroys long-term value. It frames endurance and capacity-building as superior decision strategies in complex systems
Making SaaS Inconsequential
This essay argues that most SaaS tools quietly erode ownership when they sit at the center of one’s public identity. By treating a personal domain as an interface layer and using redirects deliberately, SaaS becomes a replaceable backend rather than an anchor, reducing long-term professional risk.
On Journeyman as Canon
This piece defines Journeyman as a canonical record rather than a feed, capturing only work that has crossed a threshold of clarity and completeness. It explains what is preserved, what is excluded, and why time, rather than themes or optimization, is the primary organizing principle.