Git Your Life
Git Your Life is an open-source approach to conscious evolution—merging version control, distributed intelligence, and personal growth into an iterative framework for transformation.


Fred Williams
I specialize in Servant Leadership—helping teams, individuals, and systems evolve through collaboration, iteration, and continuous growth. Whether I’m guiding a team through software development, scaling a business, or debugging life’s merge conflicts, my goal is always the same: to create synergy, unlock potential, and cultivate high-value, high-harmony environments.
I started my journey in software release management, where I learned firsthand how powerful version control can be—not just for code, but for life. I’ve spent years discovering elegant solutions to complex problems, helping teams find alignment between technical challenges, business goals, and human dynamics.
Then, one day, while fixing a merge conflict, I had a realization that changed everything.
What if personal growth worked like Git?
What if we could version-control our evolution?
What if life wasn’t about success vs. failure, but about continuous iteration?
That’s how Git Your Life was born—where technology, philosophy, and conscious evolution merge into a practical, iterative framework for growth.
Beyond the tech world, I also built Rev Kombucha, a business that started from a simple passion—brewing for friends and coworkers. What began as an experiment quickly gained momentum, even catching the attention of the Boulder, Colorado office of Twitter. That same spirit of experimentation, feedback, and refinement that fueled my kombucha journey is the same principle that drives Git Your Life—everything is an iteration, every step is a commit, and every experience refines the next version of who we are.
Now, I explore what happens when we stop evolving by accident and start evolving by design.
When I’m not writing, refining consciousness repositories, or guiding teams through transformation, you can find me brewing kombucha, debugging life’s merge conflicts, or pushing commits to my own growth.