About Me
Getting to Know Mat
Somewhere in my 30s, I realized you can't muscle through everything anymore. You have real responsibilities, limited time, and a body that actually needs sleep now. Life becomes a balancing act between having enough energy to show up, doing things that actually matter, and handling everything that demands your attention.
The people who seem to handle this well aren't superhuman—they've just gotten better at three things: paying attention to what's really happening instead of running on autopilot, being ruthless about what deserves their time, and staying focused when it counts. Get those right, and something shifts. You're less harsh with yourself, more patient with others, and more steady when things get hard.
That's the goal—not some enlightened state, just being a more grounded, decent human who's actually present for their own life. This is the lens through which I try to see everything now. But it took me a while to get here.
As a toddler, apparently I was a handful—the kind of child who, upon entering any room, would immediately begin systematically pulling out drawers like a tiny, cheerful burglar. I don't remember any of it. What I do remember is being an introverted kid who spent a lot of time in his own head, wanted friends, and didn't have the manual for how to make that happen easily.
School revealed early that my brain and traditional education weren't naturally aligned. Some things clicked instantly—patterns, systems, how pieces fit together. Other things that seemed effortless for everyone else required me to find workarounds. I learned that I understand deeply but don't memorize easily. I pick things up fast when I'm immersed, but labels and terminology slip away if I don't use them constantly. So I adapted. I stopped fighting how my mind worked and started designing around it.
Growing up, I could be reactive and intense without realizing it. I said things the wrong way. I missed social cues. I tried too hard with the wrong people and not enough with the right ones. Home had its share of chaos, and I learned early to be the one who handles things when no one else will. That role stuck—I'm still the family fixer, the one who manages logistics and navigates hard conversations.
But here's what all of that taught me: you can't muscle through everything. I went through more hardships in my younger years than I probably should have, and the stress took a real toll. I burned out more than once before I understood what was happening. So I got serious about learning myself—not in a navel-gazing way, but practically. What drains me. What restores me. How to read my own signals before I hit empty.
I've built something that actually works. Not a rigid system—more like a set of habits and cues that keep me grounded. I invest heavily in three skills: awareness (constant reflection on energy, purpose, and stress), prioritization (knowing what actually matters and discussing problems openly), and focus (the discipline to go deep when it counts). These aren't abstract concepts for me—they're daily practice. They shape how I design my routines, manage my energy, and show up for people.
What I've learned is that doing no harm comes first. Then you figure out how to make things better. This applies to everything—work, relationships, how I talk to myself. I used to lead with intensity and solutions. Now I try to lead with curiosity and contribution. Everyone has their own sense of purpose, and the last thing I want to do is step on that. I'd rather find where our purposes align and build something together.
I enjoy spirited cooperation—whether it's a conversation that challenges my thinking or a project where we're genuinely building toward something. I set expectations early because surprises create stress, and stress makes everyone worse at everything. I've learned to communicate proactively, compromise willingly, and stay curious about my own limits instead of pretending I don't have them.
I'm not sharing all this because I've figured everything out. I'm sharing it because I know how much pain stress causes, and I know how long it took me to develop skills that actually help. If any of this resonates or saves someone else some suffering, that's the point.
The version of me that existed twenty years ago would be surprised by who I am now—more patient, more grounded, more willing to admit what I don't know. I'm still direct. I still think in systems. I still disappear into topics that fascinate me. But I've learned that showing up well for your own life means pacing yourself for the long game, not sprinting until you collapse.
That's the work. I'm still doing it.
— Mat
For Matchmakers
You're trying to figure out if I'm the right fit. Let me save us both some time by telling you how I actually work.
I set expectations early. Not because I'm inflexible—the opposite, actually. Clear expectations up front mean fewer surprises, less stress, and more room for the real work. When everyone knows what they're walking into, we can spend our energy on solving problems instead of managing misunderstandings.
I believe there's what needs to get done, and there are people's feelings about their purpose. You never want to take away someone's purpose—you want to contribute to it. This shapes how I approach every collaboration. I'm not interested in being right at someone else's expense. I'm interested in outcomes that work for everyone, even when that requires compromise and iteration.
What working with me looks like
I'm a systems thinker. I see how pieces connect, where the friction is, and what's actually causing problems versus what just looks like the problem. I work best as an individual contributor with clear ownership—give me a complex challenge and space to go deep, and I'll deliver.
I communicate best in writing. Not because I can't hold a conversation, but because writing gives me room to think precisely. I'm direct, which some people find refreshing and others find abrupt. I've learned to calibrate, ask questions before assuming, and check that my delivery is landing the way I intend.
I've learned to manage my energy carefully. I went through enough hardship in my younger years to understand what burnout actually costs. Now I'm deliberate about sustainability—mine and the team's. I don't confuse motion with progress, and I don't mistake intensity for effectiveness.
What I bring
I enjoy spirited cooperation. The best projects I've been part of involved genuine exchange—where people challenged each other's thinking, built on ideas together, and came out with something better than anyone would have made alone. I show up for that kind of work.
My approach is simple: do no harm first, then figure out how to make things better. This applies to code, to processes, to relationships, to how I manage my own time. I invest in awareness, prioritization, and focus—not as buzzwords, but as daily practice that makes everything else possible.
I've made enough mistakes to know my limits and enough progress to know they're not fixed. I communicate proactively because I've seen what happens when people don't. I compromise willingly because I've learned that holding ground on everything means losing ground on what matters.
If you're looking for someone who shows up prepared, thinks in systems, communicates clearly, and genuinely wants outcomes that work for everyone involved—we should talk.
If you need someone who thrives on ambiguity with no structure, or who energizes a room with spontaneous enthusiasm, I'm probably not your person. No hard feelings. Fit matters.
— Mat Banik