Since childhood, I’ve been obsessed with how things work—whether I was cracking open the family computer to trace its circuitry or staring up at the night sky wondering how the universe fits together. The deeper I looked, the more I realised the human body is its own cosmos, packed with intricate networks just begging to be decoded. That insight pushed me to blend both passions: I earned a BSc in Basic Medical Sciences at Jordan University of Science and Technology, then sharpened my coding skills during a year of intensive programming coursework at the University of Jordan. followed by a MSc in Bioinformatics at the University of Leicester in the UK with distinction, and now I’m gearing up for a PhD with the Microbiome Dynamics group at Leibniz-HKI Jena, where I’ll be spending my days on HPC clusters hunting for patterns in gigabytes of microbial data.
Outside the screen you’ll usually find me talking about food, AI, or soccer. If you ever make it to Jordan, promise me two things: wander the rose-red canyons of Petra —one of the seven wonders of the world—and stay after dark for stargazing in Wadi Rum. And when hunger strikes? Nothing beats a generous plate of mansaf, the national lamb-and-yogurt feast.