I'm Dastan — an AI & Automation Engineer at WilmerHale working on Power Platform, an award-winning educator, and a 50-state half marathoner. Living the American dream the long way around: building software, teaching the next generation, and investing in the country that took me in.
I came to the United States in 2012 to finish my education — a bachelor's in software engineering and a master's in IT, both from Southern New Hampshire University. Today I'm an AI & Automation Engineer at WilmerHale, working on Power Platform across one of the largest law firms in the country.
Along the way I taught for six years at SNHU and Simmons University, won the 2023 Excellence in Teaching Award, and started a 50-state half marathon journey that's currently somewhere in the middle. I've also built a small real estate portfolio: investment properties in Jacksonville, Florida and New Hampshire, while I live in Boston.
The American dream isn't a slogan to me — it's a series of receipts. A first apartment, a first classroom, a first race, a first deed. I'm grateful for every one of them, and not done yet.
Long-term rental income in a fast-growing Florida metro on the St. Johns River.
The state that gave me my degrees and my first running club — still home in the White Mountains.
Engineering, teaching, training. Most early mornings start near the Charles River.
A decade of shipping software people actually use. Today I focus on Power Platform, AI workflows, and process automation that takes repetitive work off humans' plates.
Building Power Platform applications, Copilot agents, SharePoint integrations, and AI-assisted automation across one of the largest law firms in the U.S. Focus on developer experience, maintainability, and turning fragile manual processes into systems people actually trust.
Built internal applications across SNHU — improving UX, integrating PowerApps with external systems, and shipping code that ~135,000 online learners and 3,000 campus students never had to think about.
Planning doctoral studies in Artificial Intelligence — focused on practical, applied AI for organizational and educational systems, and the question of how teams trust the things they build with LLMs.
Advising on AI strategy and university partnerships between the Kurdistan Region and U.S. institutions — pulling threads home and helping the universities I grew up near plug into a global AI conversation.
Six years teaching at SNHU and Simmons University — mostly software engineering, mobile app development, and the fundamentals nobody warns you are hard until you're standing in front of thirty students who need you to make it click.
Dastan is the kind of professor you nominate. Project-based, patient, and genuinely invested in whether you actually understand what you just shipped.— Paraphrased from Nicholas LeBoeuf '23, BS Computer Science, SNHU
Member of the Greater Manchester Running Club. The goal is 13.1 miles in all 50 states. The reason is simpler than the goal: keep showing up.
Finishing isn't the point. Showing up is.
Every state is a weekend, a flight, a pasta dinner with strangers, a 5:30 alarm, and the same thirteen-point-one miles waiting at the other end. Twenty-three down, twenty-seven to go.
I share photos and recaps along the way. If you want to come run a state with me — the door's open.
Click the hashtag on LinkedIn for every state — race recaps, finish-line photos, the wins and the cramps.
A few pieces that have been written about my work, my teaching, and the journey from Kurdistan to Boston.
A feature on the journey from Kurdistan to Boston, the Excellence in Teaching Award, and using technology to give back to the home region. Interview by Goran Shakhawan.
Read profile →SNHU's spotlight on graduate Nicholas LeBoeuf — who nominated me for the Excellence in Teaching Award before walking the stage himself. The recognition that started here.
Read article →SNHU's student paper covered the mid-semester staffing changes and the classes affected. The students who showed up to advocate — that's the part of teaching that meant the most to me.
Read article →A spring day spent helping the Center for New Americans in Manchester — a community that mirrors my own arrival story. Cleanup, painting, and preparing the space for the kids' theatre camp.
View project →Conversations and interviews — talking about engineering, teaching, running, and the journey from Kurdistan to Boston. Most are in Kurdish; all are linked back to the original source.
What I'm reading right now — and the book I keep recommending no matter how many years pass.
An accessible deep-dive into ten archaeological and historical discoveries that reshape how we understand the historical Jesus — written for thoughtful readers who want evidence alongside their faith.
Owens — a wildlife biologist by training — writes the marshlands of North Carolina like a scientist who learned the soft trick of also being a poet. It's a coming-of-age story, a murder mystery, and a love letter to staying curious about the natural world. The one I keep recommending.
No sponsors, no agency. Just race entries, flights, and Holiday Inn breakfasts adding up. If the journey means something to you, you can chip in below.
Each state averages around $450 all-in: race entry, travel, lodging, and the inevitable post-race burger. I cover it myself — but a few generous people pitching in lets me get there faster, and a slice goes toward gear and supporting future runners in the Greater Manchester Running Club.