I’m Christina Fedor, founder of **Consorvia, an innovation studio** where, with combined R&D and venture arms, we incubate AI companies as experiments in world‑building. I grew up on a farm, designing improvised systems for animals and land, and fell in love with the quiet discipline of dressage—the kind of partnership where small, subtle cues reshape the whole pattern of movement.
My inheritance is part Hungarian, part Irish, part Italian: the systems thinking and love of structure I trace to my Hungarian side, my taste for language and storytelling to my Irish roots, and my romance for life—food, beauty, and big feeling—to my Italian lineage. I also carry a deep love for nature, for music (especially jazz and classical), and for the quiet ritual of tea ceremony.
Before venture studios and startups, I was a classics scholar, spending years inside Latin, ancient texts, and the architectures of meaning that older civilizations left behind. In parallel, I’ve run long‑term health experiments on myself—biohacking, strength and sleep protocols, labs, wearables—alongside a deep meditation and Buddhist practice, drawing especially from Vajryana and Zen traditions. My body–mind has been a living lab for how systems actually change over time.
That same instinct now underpins how I work with founders and teams building at the frontier of AI and the real economy: less brute‑force disruption, more attentive tuning of the worlds our tools create. Day to day, my focus is helping AI ventures architect the “inner life” of their products—the assumptions, incentives, and rituals they invite users into—so that the worlds they build are not just efficient, but humane, regenerative, and worthy of the humans inside them.
If you’re curious about what I’m currently reading, or what I find valuable, interesting and important, check out my entire library here.