The skills I use in strategy and operations didn't come from classrooms alone. They came from solving Rubik's cubes in under 60 seconds, building art installations at Burning Man, climbing 5.12a routes, and volunteering since I was 11. Here's how my hobbies shaped my professional toolkit.
I've been solving Rubik's cubes in under 60 seconds for years. It's not about memorizing algorithms—it's about recognizing patterns instantly and executing the optimal sequence without hesitation.
I climb 5.12a routes, which requires more than strength—it demands problem-solving, persistence, and the ability to read sequences several moves ahead. You can't muscle through a 5.12; you have to find the efficient path.
I've built emergent art installations and experiences for private clients, ticketed events, and open-access gatherings—including installations at Burning Man and City of Gods. This work combines project management, creative problem-solving, and execution under brutal constraints (weather, budget, time, regulations).
I founded a 501(c)(3) nonprofit that provides resources to schools in rural Afghanistan. We won 3rd place in the Anthem Awards "Small Nonprofit of the Year" (2024) by running as the leanest possible organization: 100% of donations go directly to schools, with board members covering all admin costs.
I'm fluent in Czech (my family is Czech), which gives me dual US/EU citizenship and a cross-cultural perspective. Speaking a second language isn't just about words—it's about understanding different ways of thinking and communicating.
I completed a full-stack coding bootcamp in 2020, gaining working proficiency in React (front-end) and Node.js (back-end). While I don't code professionally, the experience fundamentally changed how I work with engineers and approach technical problems.
I occasionally experiment with molecular gastronomy—using chemistry and physics to transform ingredients in unexpected ways. Spherification, emulsification, sous vide precision—it's cooking as controlled experimentation.
These hobbies might seem unrelated, but they share common threads that define how I work:
Whether it's a scrambled cube, a climbing route, or a broken sales process—I see patterns quickly and identify the optimal sequence to fix them.
Speedcubing, climbing efficiently, building lean nonprofits—I'm constantly asking "what's the minimum viable effort for maximum impact?"
Molecular gastronomy, A/B testing, iterating on art installations—I treat everything as an experiment, learning from failures and scaling successes.
Climbing routes that take 30 attempts, running experiments that fail, building nonprofits from scratch—I'm comfortable with repeated failure as long as I'm learning.
Coding, event production, nonprofit design—I naturally think in systems, understanding how components interact and what breaks when you change variables.
Coordinating artists, fabricators, donors, and event organizers teaches the same skills as coordinating product, engineering, sales, and finance.
I'm always happy to talk about the intersection of hobbies, pattern recognition, and operational excellence.