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Pinned March 16, 2026 · 8 min read · Elias Teubner
#personal #story #about-me

About Me — The Story Behind the Code

Most people know me through what I build. Here's the person who builds it. This is the long version — not curated, not sanitized — about a quiet kid from Austria who decided at some point that staying quiet wasn't an option anymore.

The Kid Who Thought Too Much

I was the quiet one. The kid who sat in the back, barely talked, and had maybe two or three real friends at any given time. Introverted to the core. But my brain never stopped running. I was that annoying kid who was good at almost everything academic without really trying — math, science, languages, you name it. Everything except sports. Sports were never my thing.

Here's the part that fed my ego for years: I never did homework. Rarely paid attention in class. But when exam season came around, I'd cram the night before — sometimes the morning of — and walk out with a grade that made people wonder how. It worked. It always worked. And honestly? I still do this at university. Feed the slides into an AI, grind through it the night before, and show up knowing just enough to pass. Sometimes more than enough. Sometimes not — I've had to retake a few exams because I pushed the line too far. There's a fine line between confidence and arrogance, and I've danced on both sides of it more times than I'd like to admit.

The ADHD Brain

Let's talk about the obvious. I have ADHD, and I'm not going to be quiet about it.

My brain is a browser with 47 tabs open, three of them playing music, and one on fire. Ideas come at me like a firehose — at 2 AM, in the shower, in the middle of a conversation about something unrelated. I'll be working on one project and suddenly have an idea for three more. The hyperfocus is real too — when something grabs me, I can sit for 14 hours straight and forget to eat. But ask me to do something boring and repetitive? My brain physically revolts.

This is exactly why I built my personal assistant. Not as a fun side project (though it became one), but because I genuinely needed it. My ADHD brain generates ideas faster than I can write them down. It forgets appointments, loses track of deadlines, and jumps between tasks like a pinball machine. The assistant was a coping mechanism that turned into something real.

ADHD is a superpower and a curse, and I say that without any irony. The creativity, the energy, the ability to connect dots that other people don't even see — that's the superpower. The inability to organize, to follow through on the boring parts, to maintain consistency — that's the curse. I've learned to build systems around myself to compensate. The assistant is one of them. This portfolio is another. Structure the chaos, and the chaos becomes fuel.

The Language Branch

I went to BG/BRG Zell am See and chose the language branch — French, English, and Latin. French clicked immediately. I'm fluent now, and I love it. But I didn't stop there.

Languages are puzzles to me. The grammar, the patterns, the way different cultures encode different ways of thinking into their syntax — it's addictive. I'm on a 1,300+ day Duolingo streak (yes, I'm one of those people). Beyond French, I've taught myself conversational Russian, Tagalog, Spanish, and — because why not — High Valyrian from Game of Thrones. That last one is pure fun. The others are real attempts to understand how people from different parts of the world think and communicate. Languages are the original code.

The Competitive One

I don't like losing. Actually, that's an understatement. When I see someone who's better than me at something, something inside me clicks and I cannot rest until I've closed the gap. It's not always healthy — I've burned hours, days, weeks grinding at things just because someone else was ahead of me. But it's produced results.

In high school, I won bronze medals at the Physics Olympiade in Salzburg — twice. I was in "Mathe und Physik Vertiefend," the advanced math and physics track. Physics especially made sense to me — the elegance of a formula that describes reality.

Then there's chess. I won U18 Champion at Kiju-Rapid 2023, placed Top 18 at the Sonnenterrassen-Open 2025 (entered as 29th seed), and won the Tandem-Schach tournament with my partner Michel Tischler as Team TnT. Chess is pure competition distilled — no teammates to blame, no luck, just you and the board.

And Beat Saber. I represented Austria in the Beat Saber World Cup 2021. Yes, that's a real thing. Competitive VR gaming at an international level. We played against the USA (terrifying), lost a heartbreaking tiebreak against Finland, and I loved every second of it. If there's a way to compete at it, I'm interested.

Finding Code

I taught myself to code near the end of high school. Nothing the curriculum handed me — just the logical next step for someone who loved puzzles and building things.

Tech runs in the family. My dad, Christoph Perhab, is the CEO of 44coaches GmbH and Christoph Perhab IT Solutions, and a shareholder of Intelligent Automation GmbH. My stepdad, Alexander Goll, is the CEO of Goell.net. I grew up surrounded by tech conversations, watching people build businesses around software and automation. Only a matter of time before I started building myself.

One thing that's defined me from the start: I always prefer building things myself, even when a solution already exists. It's part stubbornness, part ADHD novelty-seeking, part genuine belief that understanding how something works from the ground up makes you better at it. I'd rather spend a weekend building a tool than 20 minutes learning someone else's. Is that always efficient? No. Does it make me a better engineer? I think so.

The Personal Assistant

This is the project that ties everything together.

I built a personal assistant specifically to manage the chaos that comes with my ADHD brain. It lives on my phone. It manages my calendar, captures ideas before they vanish into the void, and keeps me honest about what I said I'd do. Every wild idea that pops into my head at 3 AM gets dictated to the assistant before my brain moves on to the next one.

It has grown beyond a coping mechanism, though. I'm experimenting with putting it on a Raspberry Pi — giving it a voice, giving it ears, making it something I can talk to out loud. Imagine walking into your room and saying "Hey, what's on my schedule tomorrow?" and getting a real, context-aware answer from something you built yourself. That's the goal.

The assistant is proof that the best tools come from solving your own problems. I didn't build it because the market needed another AI assistant. I built it because I needed it. And the fact that it's becoming something other people might want to use someday? That's just a bonus.

AI Changes Everything

I have access to Claude Max through the company, and it's fundamentally changed how I work. One person can now build what once took a team. Ideas that would have taken me months now take days. Prototypes that would have required a team now happen on a Saturday afternoon.

I consume AI content constantly — podcasts like The AI Journal Club and Darknet Diaries keep me in the loop on both the frontier and the security implications. I'm planning an AI/tech news aggregator that curates the most important stories for me to read over breakfast every morning. Because staying current in AI isn't optional anymore — it's survival.

Nothing stops me from prototyping wild ideas now. The barrier between "I wonder if..." and "let me try it" has essentially disappeared. That's the most exciting thing about working in tech right now.

From Introvert to Extrovert

This is the growth arc I'm most proud of.

The kid who sat in the back with two friends? He's gone. Not overnight — a transition that took a few years. But somewhere along the way, I went from dreading social interaction to actively seeking it out. I love talking to people now. I love hearing their ideas, especially the crazy ones. I love encouraging people to build things, to try things, to take risks.

Because I know what it feels like when no one believes in your idea. When people think you're weird for wanting to build a personal assistant or for spending hours on a side project that might never go anywhere. I've been that person. And now I'm the one telling others: "That sounds insane. Do it."

Where I'm Headed

I work obsessively. Not because I have to — because I can't not. Every hour goes into getting better: better at code, better at building, better at becoming the version of myself I'm chasing. I'm not there yet. But I'm closer than I was last month, and that's all the motivation I need.

This portfolio, this blog, these projects — they're not a showcase. They're a record. Proof of direction, not just capability. And if you've read this far, you understand something that most people don't figure out until much later: I don't do things halfway.

— Elias

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