Perspective is everything. A shift in angle, a step back, a view from above—it can turn the familiar into something entirely new. As a child, I would climb trees just to see the world from a different height, lie on my back and watch the clouds reshape the sky, or stand on a hill and take in the way the land unfolded beyond me. There was always something magical about seeing things from a place few ever looked. So when I first sent a drone into the sky, it wasn’t just about flying—it was about discovery. It was about unlocking a world that had always been there, just waiting to be seen.

What started as a personal obsession quickly became something deeper. There’s something almost surreal about seeing the world from above—like stepping into the eyes of a bird, watching landscapes stretch and fold in ways we never notice from the ground. With a drone, I can capture moments that would otherwise slip away: the golden glow of a sunrise rolling over the hills, the quiet symmetry of a city waking up, the untouched patterns nature weaves across an open field. It’s about freezing time, preserving a scene exactly as it was in that fleeting instant—whether as a vivid photograph or an immersive 3D world that can be explored long after the moment has passed.

And each time I send a drone into the air, that same sense of wonder returns. No two flights are ever the same; no two perspectives ever identical. Light shifts, shadows dance, and the world reveals itself in ways I could never have planned. In those moments, I’m reminded why I do this—not just for the technology or the technique, but for the opportunity to capture something real, something fleeting. A perspective that might have gone unnoticed, now preserved to be seen, shared, and remembered.

This isn’t just work for me—it’s what I love doing. And if I can use that passion to create something meaningful for others, then that’s exactly where I want to be.