About

About

[Photo – calm morning light over a workspace or yoga mat]

From Systems to Minds

I worked for many years in the software industry, building systems that had to be stable and reliable. Over time I noticed that the same logic that holds code together can help people find stability. Both depend on small, deliberate changes and clear feedback.

Alongside that career I practised Ashtanga yoga. It taught me patience, breath control, and persistence. When I later faced a serious illness those lessons became real. Recovery needed the same quiet discipline that debugging always had, but now the system was my own body and mind.

In time I left contracting and retrained in hypnotherapy and cognitive behavioural work. I wanted to bring the same structure and clarity to emotional recovery that I had once applied to software.

[Photo – portrait or hands in conversation, soft light]

The Transendence Approach

Transendence brings together cognitive behavioural methods, hypnosis, and reflection. It is not about performance or trance. It is about awareness and practice, learning how thought and behaviour influence each other and how to change them with intention.

  • Notice what is happening instead of what you expect.
  • See what repeats and how it continues.
  • Change one small thing and observe what follows.

The aim is practical self-understanding, free of mysticism.

[Photo – workspace with notebook, warm natural light]

Why Transendence Exists

Transendence began from a simple idea. Therapy tools should be private, transparent, and under the user’s control. The platform provides a secure place for reflection forms, resilience exercises, and personal tracking. Nothing is shared or monitored. What you write remains yours.

The design follows the same principles I used in engineering work: clarity, accountability, and respect for data.

[Photo – horizon or early light over calm water]

Looking Forward

My focus is on resilience and steady change. Growth happens through practice, not through sudden transformation. The same habits that keep a system stable can keep a person steady: awareness, reflection, and patience.

Stability is not luck. It is design, practice, and persistence.