In my short lifetime, I have witnessed so much ingenuity. This past decade, we have seen ground-breaking innovations take off at exponential rates. Targeted cancer therapy, mRNA vaccines, 3D bio-printing, bionic prosthetics and minimally-invasive surgeries are present-day feasibilities and the future is boundless with widespread growth of AI. It is thrilling to know how much we have achieved and just in the field of medicine. This has largely inspired me to transition from being a bystander to a contributor in this technical revolution.Today at Redlen here in B.C., I am thrilled to be part of a revolutionary team delivering photon-counting imaging modules to make multi-energy CT imaging a reality. Our detectors provide 2x image resolution at 40% lower radiation dose in a total of minutes, significantly improving diagnostic accuracy and patient safety at large. I have dabbled in PCB/hardware design, experimentation and debugging, data analysis in wearable textile sensors and X-ray imaging detectors, backend development, QA software development and product validation. This broad knowledge gives me an edge in understanding how various components must integrate synergistically to create seamlessly functional products. Making that happen is my everyday job and it is impossible to do so without learning with and from other amazing contributors around me. I follow this one good advice: Don’t be a know-it-all, be a learn-it-all. Every new day is a great gift - an opportunity to learn, to grow and to make the most out of our human experience.