The Founder's Story
Answers found him.
In 2011, Mr. Kevin lost his father — the man who had shaped everything about how he moved through the world. They were incredibly close. And that's what made what happened next so unsettling to everyone around him — he didn't fall apart. No tears. No visible unraveling. The man who had just lost one of the most important people in his life looked, to the outside world, like he was fine.
He wasn't fine. He just didn't grieve the way people expected him to.
For three years, that quiet concerned the people closest to him. Eventually, they suggested he see a psychiatrist. At 46, he was officially diagnosed with ADHD — confirming suspicions he'd carried most of his adult life. The diagnosis explained a lot. But it didn't explain everything.
In 2022, he lost his mother — the person who knew him before he knew himself. The woman who held every secret, carried every worry, and loved him in ways he's still uncovering. Her passing left a weight that doesn't have a word.
For three years, that weight stayed with him.
In July 2025, during a difficult season of transition, he found himself doing what you do when you're trying to put things back in order — sorting through old papers, looking for his birth certificate. And an envelope fell out.
He wasn't looking for answers. Answers found him.

Inside was a psychiatrist's letter from 1975 — written when he was just six years old. It described, in clinical detail, what we now recognize as ADHD. His parents had read it. They knew what it said. And together, they made what was undoubtedly the most difficult decision of their lives — they chose not to tell him, hoping he would grow out of it. They carried that knowledge together, through their entire marriage, out of love and protection.
The hardest part wasn't the diagnosis. He'd already been officially diagnosed at 46. The hardest part was realizing that this letter had existed the entire time. Every year of wondering why things felt harder than they should. Why conversations went sideways. Why relationships crumbled in ways he couldn't name. Why focus came in floods or not at all. Why there was a voice in his head that never stopped questioning whether he was enough.
That letter wouldn't have cured anything. But it would have explained everything.
He was 56 years old.
“I built this so no one has to wait 50 years to understand themselves.”
That moment — on the floor, surrounded by old papers and a life in transition — became the foundation for the PMI OS, the system that changed his life. PromptMe, Nquizzy, and the belief that your identity should be your superpower, not your mystery.
Before that letter, Mr. Kevin spent decades talking to people who didn't understand how his brain worked — and trying to explain something he couldn't name. Nquizzy is the companion he wished he'd had. One that listens the way neurodivergent brains need to be heard. One that remembers not just what you said, but where you were when you said it. Your brain isn't broken. It just needs someone who speaks the language.
We don't want your data. We want you well.