NOTES / OWNED CONTENT
Document the life. Keep the method.
The owned editorial library for parenting, AI, creator work, freelance, investing, commerce and family life.
Not a pile of posts— seven living notebooks.
Each category can grow into series, features, video, audio and editorial. These are the structure and first real topics; planned work is labelled clearly.
Parenting notes
A father’s record of growth, care, co-creation and boundaries around a child’s privacy.
02 / AI CREATIONAI notes
Video, audio, editorial, prompting and real production workflows—not just finished outputs.
03 / CREATORCreator notes
Ideas, production, distribution, analytics and honest platform operations.
04 / SIDE PROJECTSFreelance notes
Upwork, remote projects, client fit, scope, delivery and revenue validation.
05 / INVESTINGInvesting notes
Market observations, company research and pre/post-market reviews; learning only.
06 / CROSS-BORDERCommerce notes
Experiments from direction and supply chain to content-led demand and the first real order.
07 / FAMILY / LIFEFamily & life
Family collaboration, career choices, changing routines and long-term plans.
LATEST TOPICS
Starting with real questions,
one note at a time.
Using AI to preserve childhood—where are the boundaries?
A pre-publishing checklist for faces, voices, identity and a child’s long-term digital footprint.
Documenting growth without turning a child into a traffic tool
How real parenting problems, useful methods and honest visual evidence can coexist.
A 15-second AI film, from script to delivery
A complete chain covering script, storyboard, generation, voice, edit and delivery files.
How can AI narration feel less correct—and more alive?
Why writing rhythm, pauses, voice and scene relationships determine emotional quality.
Why one story should not be posted unchanged everywhere
Titles, covers, duration, openings and interaction need to be reorganised per platform.
Ready, uploaded and public are three different states
A simple publishing status system that stops preparation being mistaken for a live post.