Navy veteran. Thirty years in technology. Thirty years in the Bible. Writer by craft. Overthinker by nature. Oregon.
Books, essays, stories, and humor. Experience and reflection turned into clarity you can actually use.
AI tools, workflows, and frameworks. Clarity turned into useful work, practical products, and income.
Indexes, analysis, and commentary. Noisy inputs turned into useful understanding. Pattern recognition as a spiritual practice.
The short version: Navy. Tech. Thirty years studying the Bible. Oregon. INTJ. Married to Chriss.
The longer version: Kevin spent his twenties underwater on submarines, working sonar — listening for what mattered and learning to stay calm when the pressure built. Both skills turned out to transfer.
He spent his working life in technology — the systems side, the sales side, the long middle where you learn that most problems are not actually technical. He became a serious student of the Bible in his thirties. Still at it. The two things — technology and scripture — have been in conversation ever since, and that conversation is most of what he writes about.
He writes because he can't not. He builds because the ideas are there and so are the tools. He discerns because the world has never been noisier and someone has to try.
His practical books and tools are for people trying to think clearly and act wisely in a world that is working very hard to prevent both. His explicitly Christian writing — published under the name KC Butler — goes further. It names the destination: Jesus. Not as a slogan, but as the answer to a genuine question. His essay Dread Manifesto is the clearest version of that argument he's made so far.
He is not a pastor. He is not a guru. He is not trying to build a movement. He is one person trying to write and build things that are true and useful in an age that produces neither in abundance.
The work is aimed somewhere. The three lanes converge. Where they lead is no secret.