“Shroomblooming” is my digital media and strategy practice, rooted in the quiet, interconnected work that makes visible transformation possible. Like mycelium beneath the soil, I build the unseen systems — messaging, content, and community infrastructure — that nourish lasting growth. When the conditions are right, the work fruits: campaigns that surface, stories that resonate, and impact that can finally be seen.
My Story
I am the human behind Shroombloomer, a digital media strategist, educator, and former glass artist who still thinks in terms of heat, timing, and transformation. My first career lived in a glowing studio, where I spent my days teaching others to coax flat sheets of glass into dimensional, light-catching forms. When an injury pulled me away from that work, it also nudged me toward a question that now guides everything I do: who gets to be included?
That question sent me back to my roots in media studies, where I focused on psychology, philosophy, and media art. Media is an environment that shapes human behavior and belonging. I began to experience digital space the way I once experienced the kiln. Structure matters. Energy matters. Access does not happen by accident. It is designed.
Shroombloomer grew from this shift. Like mycelium under the soil, my work is about building the networks that make visible growth possible. I partner primarily with nonprofit and mission-driven organizations to help their ideas fruit in the world. Together we cultivate digital ecosystems that invite people in, center lived experience, and turn audiences into communities.
My practice spans digital strategy, brand cultivation, curriculum and training design, content systems, live event promotion and real-time coverage, and the logistics that make ambitious programs actually run. I love a good run-of-show, a rapid-turn storytelling moment, and the quiet back-end structures that hold everything up.
At heart I am still a maker. I just work in networks instead of glass. I care about inclusive design, accessible messaging, joyful participation, and the slow, careful groundwork that allows something meaningful to emerge right on time.