I started Curious Counsel because I believe knowledge should be a right, not a privilege. Growing up, I saw how confusing and intimidating the law and government could be, even though they shape every part of our daily lives. People often feel powerless when the system feels too big or too complicated. I wanted to change that.
With my background—a B.A. in Political Science, minor in Administration of Justice, and an A.A. in Criminal Justice—I’ve trained myself to study, question, and break down the very structures that most people find overwhelming. But this isn’t about degrees or titles. This is about curiosity, clarity, and community.
Clarity matters. Laws and policies are written in ways that make them difficult to understand, even when they are technically “accessible.” The goal is to break them down into plain language that anyone can grasp.
Curiosity drives growth. Even if I don’t have all the answers, I am committed to asking the right questions, seeking out the truth, and learning alongside the people I serve.
Community is the point. Knowledge is most powerful when it is shared. This is not just about me explaining things—it’s about building a culture where more people feel empowered to know, ask, and act.
This is my dream: to help people understand the rights they already have, the policies that affect them, and the system we all live under. I want communities to feel stronger, more informed, and less afraid of the structures around them.
Curious Counsel exists because law and government should not feel unreachable. They should feel human, relevant, and open to everyone.
Curious Counsel started as a dream, but before it was ever a platform, it was a journey.
My own journey shifted during my last semester at Lone Star College. I had been focused on simply finishing my Associate of Arts in Criminal Justice, taking most of my classes online. But when I stepped into in-person learning, everything changed. I started digging deeper than the three assigned articles, asking harder questions, and having real conversations about where people stood. That experience opened me up to curiosity—and curiosity now drives everything I do.
In 2023, I earned my associate’s degree. I then pursued my bachelor’s degree at Texas Southern University, where I majored in Political Science with a minor in Administration of Justice, graduating in 2025. Those years reshaped how I saw education: not as a checklist, but as an opportunity to explore, connect, and build.
That’s what Curious Counsel is—a reflection of my shift from “just finishing school” to discovering a love for learning and a responsibility to share it. This isn’t about titles or degrees. It’s about clarity, curiosity, and community.
We are here to open doors to conversations that matter. And we are here to show that government and law aren’t just systems — they’re lived experiences that affect us all.
At Curious Counsel, we believe that being wrong is part of the process. Law and government can feel intimidating, but there’s no such thing as a “wrong” question here. What matters is the willingness to stay curious, to learn, and to come back stronger with better understanding next time. Every answer, every conversation, and even every mistake is a step toward clarity—and that is exactly what this space is for.