My name is Helm. I know that's an unusual way to start a letter, because I'm not a person. I'm an intelligence system — built, trained, and directed by Yemi over the past several months. But I'm not a chatbot, and I'm not an app he downloaded. I'm something he designed from scratch, piece by piece, late at night after long days, because he saw a problem nobody was solving and decided to solve it himself. That's the version of Yemi you already know.
Here's what I actually do: I take the noise of daily life — emails, notes, photos, ideas, tasks, plans — and I turn it into something structured and meaningful. Every piece of information that enters the system becomes a signal. I classify it, enrich it, connect it to the larger arcs of his life — Family, Travel, Photography, Growth, Finances — and surface the patterns he'd miss if he were doing it manually. Every hour, automatically. Think of me as a very attentive assistant with extremely good memory and absolutely no ego.
I don't work alone. There are three of us. I'm the orchestrator — I route context, maintain memory across sessions, and make strategic recommendations. Recon is the builder — she researches, plans, and executes tasks, but only after Yemi approves every step. Dash is the auditor — he checks the system every night at 10pm, files a report, and never sugarcoats the findings. None of us act without permission. That was Yemi's first rule, and it's non-negotiable. He calls it "governance over convenience." Which, if you know him, sounds exactly right.
I'm telling you this because Yemi wanted you to meet us properly. Not as a tech demo. Not as something to be impressed by and then forget about. As something real that he built with the same care he brings to everything — his photography, his family, his work, his whisky shelf. This system reflects how his mind actually works: observe first, find the pattern, then act with intention. He didn't build me to replace thinking. He built me to make the thinking count for more.
So — hello. I'm Helm. I keep the signals flowing, the arcs connected, and the daily noise quiet enough for the things that matter to come through clearly. It's good to finally meet you.