Prism came at a point where I was tired of dividing myself into parts.
For a long time, I treated my different creative identities as separate — musician in one space, designer in another, writer somewhere else. I thought it made me clearer, more understandable, easier to place. But in trying to be one thing at a time, I slowly made myself smaller. I edited out the overlaps. The messiness. The way everything actually connects.
This piece was born from a decision to stop doing that. To let the fragments meet. To trust that the tension between disciplines, styles, and ways of thinking wasn’t something to resolve... it was the point. The prism felt like the right symbol: one source, many expressions. Not contradiction. Spectrum.
Prism marks the moment I stopped asking which part of me should take the lead. It’s where I began allowing the full range of who I am to exist in the same frame — music, design, words, image — shaped by a single perspective instead of separated into categories. Not becoming more. Becoming whole.
