I am a world-builder, systems thinker, conceptual strategist, and creative partner for vision-led institutions and brands, working on cultural futures and thinking in ecosystems.
I hold Space for Dreaming as a liminal strategist working at the intersection of systems, stories, and futures. My work lives in the gap between what is and what could be, supporting people, brands, and institutions through times of uncertainty without sacrificing integrity. I specialize in building ecosystems — helping my collaborators reimagine futures that are not only viable, but ethically grounded and meaningful. I care for long-term responsibility over short-term performance, and I am here for creations that can grow, adapt, and endure.
Projects, offers, client work, and all the invitations for co-creation, which you can find here, are a collaborative expression of how things can be done differently when we accept that we can no longer lean on past solutions.
I hold Space for Dreaming as a liminal strategist working at the intersection of systems, stories, and futures. My work lives in the gap between what is and what could be, supporting people, brands, and institutions through times of uncertainty without sacrificing integrity.
I specialize in building ecosystems — helping my collaborators reimagine futures that are not only viable, but ethically grounded and meaningful. I care for long-term responsibility over short-term performance, and I am here for creations that can grow, adapt, and endure.
Projects, offers, client work, and all the invitations for co-creation, which you can find here, are a collaborative expression of how things can be done differently when we accept that we can no longer lean on past solutions.
Liminality is not simply my modus operandi, but, I suspect, one of the most necessary skills in the following years. None of us has the slightest clue what the world will look like in a decade or two — we can only speculate, which still doesn’t keep us “safe”, nor “in control”. When embracing liminality, half the anxiety about the future simply loses its power.
This is the place that comprises my fascinations, ongoing research, and lived experiences that exist at the intersections of worlds. I am strongly attracted to the beauty of this planet, to islands, anthropology, culture, evolving technology, and an intimate relationship with the more-than-human world.
The tools I use — meaning-making strategies, methodology co-creation, storytelling, and metaphor development — are offered as interconnected landscapes of thought. Together, they form interdisciplinary frameworks where strategy, culture, and imagination meet.
Liminality is not simply my modus operandi, but, I suspect, one of the most necessary skills in the following years. None of us has the slightest clue what the world will look like in a decade or two — we can only speculate, which still doesn’t keep us “safe”, nor “in control”. When embracing liminality, half the anxiety about the future simply loses its power.
This is the place that comprises my fascinations, ongoing research, and lived experiences that exist at the intersections of worlds. I am strongly attracted to the beauty of this planet, to islands, anthropology, culture, evolving technology, and an intimate relationship with the more-than-human world.
The tools I use — meaning-making strategies, methodology co-creation, storytelling, and metaphor development — are offered as interconnected landscapes of thought. Together, they form interdisciplinary frameworks where strategy, culture, and imagination meet.
Liminality is not simply my modus operandi, but, I suspect, one of the most necessary skills in the following years. None of us has the slightest clue what the world will look like in a decade or two — we can only speculate, which still doesn’t keep us “safe”, nor “in control”. When embracing liminality, half the anxiety about the future simply loses its power.
This is the place that comprises my fascinations, ongoing research, and lived experiences that exist at the intersections of worlds. I am strongly attracted to the beauty of this planet, to islands, anthropology, culture, evolving technology, and an intimate relationship with the more-than-human world.
The tools I use — meaning-making strategies, methodology co-creation, storytelling, and metaphor development — are offered as interconnected landscapes of thought. Together, they form interdisciplinary frameworks where strategy, culture, and imagination meet.
Yesterday is long gone, and the decade ahead of us will surely surprise us in many ways. We are in a collective liminal phase, when identities, systems, directions, and once desired futures are no longer viable. The phase between yesterday and tomorrow, when new ways of living, working, and positioning haven’t yet formed, calls for reimagining without premature closures. In the meantime, mentalities and living practices, such as that of a Space for Dreaming, provide orientation during transformation, informing strategy, storytelling, and animating creative direction.
I consider myself to be a curious explorer of relationships between people, ideas, places, cultures, and nature. Space for Dreaming is not a vague idea, a spiritual bypassing concept, nor simply a project or a website. Space for Dreaming is my lifelong work, creation, exploration, and a shared legacy mindset.
A key aspect of this liminal space is that it does not operate on usual timelines. This is an intentionally crafted context that slows reactive thinking and widens perspective, so better decisions can be made. It allows people to step out of habitual timelines (urgency, productivity, linear progress) and to consider engaging with multiple layers of reality (personal, cultural, institutional, ecological, future-oriented) at once. The goal is to support responsible, long-term decision-making.
I consider myself to be a curious explorer of relationships between people, ideas, places, cultures, and nature. Space for Dreaming is not a vague idea, a spiritual bypassing concept, nor simply a project or a website. Space for Dreaming is my lifelong work, creation, exploration, and a shared legacy mindset.
A key aspect of this liminal space is that it does not operate on usual timelines. This is an intentionally crafted context that slows reactive thinking and widens perspective, so better decisions can be made. It allows people to step out of habitual timelines (urgency, productivity, linear progress) and to consider engaging with multiple layers of reality (personal, cultural, institutional, ecological, future-oriented) at once. The goal is to support responsible, long-term decision-making.
I consider myself to be a curious explorer of relationships between people, ideas, places, cultures, and nature. Space for Dreaming is not a vague idea, a spiritual bypassing concept, nor simply a project or a website. Space for Dreaming is my lifelong work, creation, exploration, and a shared legacy mindset.
A key aspect of this liminal space is that it does not operate on usual timelines. This is an intentionally crafted context that slows reactive thinking and widens perspective, so better decisions can be made. It allows people to step out of habitual timelines (urgency, productivity, linear progress) and to consider engaging with multiple layers of reality (personal, cultural, institutional, ecological, future-oriented) at once. The goal is to support responsible, long-term decision-making.