My journey began in a college dorm room. While classmates studied calculus, I built real applications, solving actual problems with code. The computer science curriculum felt redundant compared to what I was already creating on my own.
When my platform caught the attention of venture capitalists, I made the decision to drop out. I believed — and still do — that building in the real world teaches more than any classroom could. With fresh funding, I was ready to pursue my vision full-time.
The startup life quickly consumed me. Eighty-hour workweeks became normal as I poured everything into growing the company. I believed wholeheartedly in our mission and our partnership with investors.
But things changed. Our relationship with the VC firm deteriorated as they gradually diluted my ownership and exerted increasing control. With each funding round, my creation became less mine. Eventually, I found myself working on someone else's vision rather than my own. The creative freedom that drove me to build disappeared, replaced by metrics and investor demands.
Stepping away from the company was difficult but necessary. I needed to rediscover my passion for building products that genuinely help people. This led me to explore blockchain technology, where I saw both incredible potential and disturbing trends.
A personal experience highlighted the trust crisis in cryptocurrency: when I tried to wire $50,000 to Coinbase, my bank refused the transaction outright. They cited the prevalence of scams as their reason. The representative's concern wasn't just bank policy — it reflected widespread skepticism about cryptocurrency's legitimacy.
This incident crystallized the problem I wanted to solve: why had the blockchain space become synonymous with deception? Why were rug pulls and token scams so common? The technology itself isn't the issue — it's how people have chosen to use it.
I've now committed myself to creating tokens built on transparency and genuine utility. My goal isn't a quick pump-and-dump scheme, but to develop cryptocurrencies that serve real purposes and maintain stable value. We need to break the pattern of massive sell-offs where developers abandon their communities after cashing out.
Trust must be rebuilt through code that can't be compromised and through leadership that stands accountable. This isn't just about creating another token — it's about restoring faith in what blockchain technology can achieve when wielded with integrity.
The future of crypto doesn't have to be filled with scams. With the right approach and honest intentions, we can create a safer ecosystem for everyone.