Why I started this work
Everything here began with people I care about — and a question I couldn't stop asking.
I became interested in psychology after seeing how many people around me struggled in silence. Some were bullied because of their appearance, nationality, or other things they could not change. Others faced depression, anxiety, or loneliness.
Watching friends go through these experiences made me realize how little I understood about what they were feeling and how I could help. That realization pushed me toward psychology. I wanted to understand not only why people suffer, but also what allows them to recover, grow, and find support.
For me, psychology is not just an academic field. It is a way of understanding people more deeply and creating communities where nobody feels alone.
While psychology helped me understand behavior, neuroscience made me ask an even deeper question: what is happening inside the brain itself?
I became fascinated by how billions of neurons can create thoughts, emotions, memories, and relationships. How does the same organ produce fear, motivation, empathy, or resilience? Why do mental disorders affect people so differently?
The more I learned, the more I realized that understanding the brain is one of humanity's greatest challenges. That is what draws me to neuroscience today. I hope to contribute to research that turns scientific discoveries into real improvements in people's lives.
In 2025, I started taking real steps toward learning more about all of this — and turning that curiosity into the projects you see here.