I am a neurodivergent writer and movement-based practitioner exploring reality as embodied, imaginal, and continually in the making. My work is grounded in autosurrealism, an approach that understands bodyminds not as fixed identities, but as active, generative processes — capable of composing worlds through movement, sensation, attention, imagination, and forms of knowing that exceed the rational and the normative.
Across writing, movement, and participatory practice, I explore neuroqueering as a verb: the intentional disruption of neuronormative and heteronormative habits, the cultivation of divergence, and the rehearsal of new possibilities for perception, embodiment, and relationality. Neuroqueering, in my work, is both ontological and epistemological — a practice of becoming otherwise and of knowing otherwise. It asks: What happens when sensation is trusted as intelligence? When imagination functions as inquiry? When divergence becomes a method?
Surrealist principles, especially automatism, inform my practice. I embrace automatic movement, stimming, improvisation, and non-ordinary states of consciousness as methods of inquiry — ways of loosening normative cognitive structures and accessing forms of perception and insight that cannot be reached through disciplined intention alone. By practicing the automatic alongside the intentional, the body moves as co-creator, the mind as participant, and knowledge emerges relationally, through encounter, intensity, and surprise.
I approach creativity as a form of world-making and world-knowing. Beauty, meaning, and insight emerge not from mastery or coherence, but from rupture, responsiveness, and plural attention. My work is plural, open-ended, and relational: a rehearsal of possibility, a convulsive aesthetics of becoming, and an invitation to explore neuroqueer, neuroexpansive, and pluriversal modes of knowing and being. Everything I create is an invitation to inhabit reality otherwise — to expand perception, deepen relational awareness, and participate in worlds that are alive, emergent, and shared.

