About Me

I’m Moritz – a father, digital builder, and long-term thinker from Germany.

I’ve been building online since 2015 — with real wins, false starts, and a lot of lessons in between.
Today, I’m building digital autonomy more deliberately: with family, responsibility, and long-term freedom in mind.

This site is where I document that journey openly and honestly.

Who I Am

I’m in my early forties, married, and a father of two. For most of my adult life, I’ve been drawn to building things — especially online.

Since 2015, I’ve started websites, tested different business models, earned money on the internet, and learned what it takes to create value online. Some of those efforts worked well. Others never became as consistent as they could have been.

That mix of wins, false starts, and unfinished potential taught me something important: building is not the hardest part. Staying focused, consistent, and intentional over time is.

That’s a big part of what this chapter is about for me. Not starting from zero, and not pretending to have it all figured out — but building with more clarity, more responsibility, and a longer time horizon than before.

I’m not here to sell a fantasy. I’m here to build something real.

What Digital Autonomy Means to Me

Digital autonomy is not about escaping responsibility. For me, it means building a life that gives me more control, more optionality, and more stability over time.


Responsibility Changes Perspective

Before I had children, freedom felt more abstract. It was easier to think in terms of possibilities, experiments, and personal ambition.

That changed. Responsibility gives freedom a different meaning. It makes you think more carefully about risk, stability, time, and what kind of life you are actually building.

For me, digital autonomy is no longer about “escaping” anything. It’s about creating more control, more optionality, and more long-term security for the people I care about most.

That shift changed not only what I want to build but how I want to build it.

A Personal Note