About Me
Movement is not a symptom of restlessness. It is how I stay alive.
I grew up navigating the United States. I spent my career figuring out systems. Now I am exploring what comes next.
My name is Greg Madhere. I am a first-generation Haitian-American, a husband, a father, an entrepreneur, and someone who notices friction in organizations, in systems, in life, and cannot stop thinking about where it comes from. Other people learn to ignore it. I never did.
Most systems were designed with someone else in mind. That shapes how I think about business, about money, and about place.
I spent nearly three decades in technology and professional services. I came up through the full range of it, from support to quality assurance to project delivery. That arc gave me something more useful than a specialty: a feel for how organizations actually work, where they break down, and why the people inside them are usually smarter than the systems they are stuck in. It also taught me what I did not want. Which turned out to be the beginning of figuring out what I did.
At some point I stopped waiting for the right opportunity and made one. I have been building Lowgic Partners for years, slowly at first, then with more intention. Entrepreneurship was never a late-career pivot for me. It was always where I was headed.
A few years ago I started asking different questions about how I wanted to work and live. Panama has been part of that thinking. I have visited a few times, gone deep on their residency programs, and developed a genuine curiosity about their real estate market. I am also learning Spanish and Panamanian history, slowly, deliberately, with the long view in mind.
I got introduced to boating on a business trip a couple of years ago. Something about it stuck. I came back to it earlier this month for my birthday and the bug returned harder than before. I keep moving by instinct. Boating is teaching me that stillness is not the contradiction I thought it was. It might be the reward.
This site is where I think out loud. Real estate, systems, entrepreneurship, Panama, the occasional observation that does not fit anywhere else. No agenda. No funnel. Just someone trying to figure things out in public, on the theory that the process is more useful to share than waiting until everything is polished.