
Why I Started Writing
From Flag to Page
A Red Flag was never meant to be the end of the conversation.
It’s a signal, a starting point. The questions it raises don’t disappear when the flag comes down. They follow you home. They sit with you in traffic. They keep you awake at night.
I became an author because I couldn’t stop chasing those questions. Writing became a way to wrestle with them, to lay them out in the open and see what they really meant. My work isn’t about telling you what to think. It’s about giving you the tools and the courage to think for yourself.
That path led to two books:
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Wake The F@ck Up — blunt, urgent, and unfiltered. A jolt to break through the static.
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Question Everything — slower, deeper, a long look at truth, clarity and living with purpose.
The flag, the books, the conversations they start, they’re all part of the same work.
Not to hand you answers, but to make sure you never stop asking the right questions.
If you want to follow the trail the flag started, the pages are waiting. Check it out here
We’re surrounded by warning signs.
Some are obvious: collapsing bridges, polluted rivers, debt we’ll never pay off.
Some hide in plain sight: disappearing local businesses, news stories that vanish, leaders who never answer the question they were asked.
Others are more personal: friends we’ve lost to screens or politics, conversations we’re too afraid to have, truths we avoid because they’d cost us comfort.
These are red flags. Not just in politics, but in the way we work, the way we live, and the way we treat each other.
Why A Red Flag Exists
What red flags have you ignored today?
We see them in:
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Relationships – where control replaces trust, but we stay anyway.
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Media – where stories are shaped to fit a narrative, not the truth.
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Technology – where convenience quietly trades away our privacy.
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Community – where we’re too busy, tired, or divided to notice what’s missing.
A Red Flag isn’t telling you what to believe about any of these. It’s here to say: Don’t ignore the feeling you get when something’s wrong. History doesn’t repeat itself all at once. It starts small. It starts silent.
It starts when we stop noticing the red flags.

You’ve Seen A Red Flag. Here’s What It Means.
An independent, mobile art installation sounding the alarm on mass distraction, silence, and cultural decay. A Red Flag is a mobile public art installation that appears quietly and leaves a question behind.
No slogans. No speeches. Just a red flag raised where silence has become the norm. It’s not here to tell you what to think.
It’s here to remind you that maybe… you’ve stopped thinking.
A Red Flag in the Wild
This installation moves. It doesn’t belong to one place, one crowd, or one moment.
It shows up where people aren’t expecting it — in the background of their morning commute, on the edge of a busy sidewalk, tucked between glass towers, standing alone in an open field.
Each time it appears, it’s the same:
A simple red flag. No explanation. No speeches. Just a quiet interruption in the scenery.
Some people pass without a glance.
Some slow down.
A few stop.
And in those moments, the questions begin.
These are some of the places A Red Flag has flown, and the people who saw it.

