About Me

Empowering & Elevating Others

I am a digital marketing consultant, entrepreneur, and former U.S. Army soldier with a passion for building businesses and creating opportunities. My journey has taken me from competitive athletics to the military, corporate leadership, and ultimately, entrepreneurship. With dual master’s degrees in Business and Financial Planning, I specialize in SEO, lead generation, and content marketing to help brands grow. Beyond business, I believe in continuous personal growth, strong relationships, and building a legacy that lasts. Now, through Visible Ventures, I’m sharing my journey openly—showcasing the real challenges, wins, and lessons of online entrepreneurship.

Stronger Every Day
My Journey to peak health & Performance

March

The Journey Begins

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April

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May

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A Purpose Driven Life

Get Excited

Digital Marketer

Fitness Coach

U.S Army

Renaissance Man

Entrepreneur

Digital Products

Digital Marketer

Renaissance Man

Fitness Coach

Entrepreneur

U.S. Army

Digital Products

My Story: The Evolution

Early Life

The Making of Competitor

Some kids grew up dreaming of being astronauts, firefighters, or rock stars. Me? I ran. Fast.

I was a three-sport athlete, but Track & Field was my domain. Long jump, high jump, 200m, 400m, 4×100, 4×400 relays—you name it, I ran it. My main event in high school was the 200m, and I was good—nationals-level good. Competing at the Harvard Invitational one day and National Championships the next, I felt invincible. But here’s the thing about feeling invincible—you learn quickly that you’re not.

I stretched myself too thin, didn’t hydrate, didn’t sleep, and overestimated what my body could handle. The result? A pulled hamstring at Nationals that knocked me out of competition. Painful? Yes. But it was the first major lesson in my life: Practice, preparation, and pacing yourself are key to long-term success.

When I wasn’t sprinting down a track, I was on the football field helping my team get to two championship games. We didn’t win, but we laid the foundation for future teams to dominate. Basketball? Let’s just say I wasn’t the best shooter, but I could jump high enough to touch the rim—and that counted for something.

But Track & Field was my calling. My speed earned me a college scholarship to Robert Morris University, where I quickly realized I wasn’t just a sprinter anymore. I was now a 400m runner. I hated it at first. It was grueling. It demanded more stamina, endurance, and mental toughness than I thought I had. But my coach knew better—he knew it would make me stronger.

Looking back, it was one of the best lessons I ever learned: Sometimes, the things you resist the most are exactly what you need to grow.

Travel & Military

Discipline Meets Destiny

Growing up in a small Massachusetts town, I never imagined how vast the world really was. But that all changed.

September 11, 2001, happened.

Two days later, I was scheduled to ship off for Basic Training in the U.S. Army.

Military life reshaped me. It honed my discipline, leadership, and ability to adapt under pressure. Sure, the fitness part was easy (track and field had already prepared me), but becoming a soldier was about more than just physical strength.

  • It was about mental strength.
  • It was about understanding people from all walks of life.
  • It was about teamwork—because, in combat or in business, the people around you make all the difference.

It was also where I learned something humbling: Women in combat training? Absolute beasts. I got thrown in one-on-one combat with a female soldier and she whooped me. Lesson learned: Never underestimate anyone, ever.

Early Life

The Making of a Competitor

Some kids grew up dreaming of being astronauts, firefighters, or rock stars. Me? I ran. Fast.

I was a three-sport athlete, but Track & Field was my domain. Long jump, high jump, 200m, 400m, 4×100, 4×400 relays—you name it, I ran it. My main event in high school was the 200m, and I was good—nationals-level good. Competing at the Harvard Invitational one day and the National Championships the next, I felt invincible. But here’s the thing about feeling invincible—you learn quickly that you’re not.

I stretched myself too thin, didn’t hydrate, didn’t sleep, and overestimated what my body could handle. The result? A pulled hamstring at Nationals that knocked me out of competition. Painful? Yes. But it was the first major lesson in my lifePractice, preparation, and pacing yourself are key to long-term success.

When I wasn’t sprinting down a track, I was on the football field helping my team get to two championship games. We didn’t win, but we laid the foundation for future teams to dominate. Basketball? Let’s just say I wasn’t the best shooter, but I could jump high enough to touch the rim—and that counted for something.

But Track & Field was my calling. My speed earned me a college scholarship to Robert Morris University, where I quickly realized I wasn’t just a sprinter anymore. I was now a 400m runner. I hated it at first. It was grueling. It demanded more stamina, endurance, and mental toughness than I thought I had. But my coach knew better—he knew it would make me stronger.

Looking back, it was one of the best lessons I ever learned: Sometimes, the things you resist the most are exactly what you need to grow.

Travel & Military

Discipline Meets Destiny

Growing up in a small Massachusetts town, I never imagined how vast the world really was. But that all changed.

September 11, 2001, happened.

Two days later, I was scheduled to ship off for Basic Training in the U.S. Army.

Military life reshaped me. It honed my discipline, leadership, and ability to adapt under pressure. Sure, the fitness part was easy (track and field had already prepared me), but becoming a soldier was about more than just physical strength.

  • It was about mental strength.
  • It was about understanding people from all walks of life.
  • It was about teamwork—because, in combat or in business, the people around you make all the difference.

It was also where I learned something humbling: Women in combat training? Absolute beasts. I got thrown in one-on-one combat with a female soldier and she whooped me. Lesson learned: Never underestimate anyone, ever.

The Road Ahead

NMW (No Matter What)

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