Dr. Yves Eveillard, MD
Founder & Systems Architect
As I look across the different chapters of my life — medicine, humanitarian service, emerging technology, digital systems, spiritual inquiry, and public teaching — I no longer see a collection of unrelated pursuits.
I see three enduring pillars:
Each arose from a different part of my experience, but all are guided by the same underlying conviction: knowledge should expand human possibility, truth should transform the mind, and compassion should relieve suffering.
Together, these three pillars form the foundation of my work and, perhaps, whatever legacy that work may leave behind.
The first pillar looks toward the future.
Through EVPAL and the wider electric and advanced-technology ecosystem, I have sought to understand, organize, and help others navigate a rapidly changing world.
Within this vision, “EV” extends beyond the electric vehicle. It encompasses:
These fields may appear distinct, but they increasingly converge through transportation, energy, artificial intelligence, automation, digital infrastructure, and intelligent systems.
EVPAL is conceived as an intelligence and navigation layer for this evolving ecosystem — a means of connecting people with vehicles, technologies, infrastructure, information, services, and emerging possibilities.
My interest in technology has never been limited to machinery or novelty. I am interested in systems: how their parts connect, where they fail, how they can be improved, and how complexity can be translated into something useful.
This same systems thinking extends into the infrastructure required to support the AI economy: compute, power, siting, integration, and the physical realities that determine whether intelligent systems can operate reliably in the real world.
Innovation, as I understand it, is not merely the creation of something new. It is the responsible organization of possibility.
It asks: What is emerging? What will humanity need? And how can we prepare wisely for the world that is coming?
The second pillar looks inward.
Thought & Love Ministry is envisioned as a public Christian teaching ministry and a living spiritual manuscript devoted to two foundational disciplines.
The mind is not merely a passive observer of life. It interprets. It remembers. It anticipates. It fears. It judges. It assigns meaning. It can preserve truth, but it can also repeat old injuries, defend illusions, and sustain unnecessary conflict.
Renewal of the mind is therefore a lifelong spiritual discipline. Within traditional Bible-based Christian teaching, it involves learning to think through faith, grace, truth, repentance, forgiveness, and the mind of Christ.
Within the structured mind-training of A Course in Miracles, it involves recognizing patterns rooted in fear, ego, judgment, and separation — and practicing a different way of perceiving.
Questions to Examine
What thoughts have I accepted without question?
What judgments continue to imprison me?
What fears distort my perception?
What must be surrendered, corrected, or reinterpreted?
Renewal begins when the mind becomes willing to examine itself.
Renewed thought must eventually become visible in the way we live. Love is more than sentiment, affection, or religious language. It is a discipline practiced through forgiveness, patience, compassion, reconciliation, service, courage, restraint, and care.
Thought is the inward work. Love is the outward evidence.
Renew the mind. Correct perception. Practice love.
Unlike a traditional book that eventually reaches its final chapter, Thought & Love is intended to remain open and continuously evolving — a living public book about the transformation of thought and the embodiment of love.
The third pillar is grounded in healing and service.
Medicine taught me that precision matters because human life matters. Clinical practice requires careful observation, disciplined reasoning, responsibility, and the willingness to make decisions that affect another person’s health and future. Psychiatry deepened that understanding by revealing how thought, emotion, memory, biology, relationships, and environment converge within the experience of suffering.
Yet healing cannot always be confined to a diagnosis, prescription, office, or professional encounter. A person may need treatment, but that person may also need food, shelter, education, reassurance, guidance, advocacy, dignity, or someone willing to listen.
Pro Bono Care emerged from this wider understanding of service — to help organize compassion into useful action, particularly for people whose needs are overlooked because they lack access, resources, representation, or influence.
Healing May Take Many Forms
Medicine gave me knowledge. Service continually reminds me why that knowledge was given.
At first, these pursuits may seem unrelated. Technology looks toward the future. Spiritual teaching looks inward. Medicine responds to suffering in the present. Yet they are connected by a common purpose.
asks:
What can humanity build and become?
asks:
How must the mind change?
asks:
Whom are we called to serve?
A Philosophy of Purposeful Life
Advance what is possible.
Transform what is within.
Heal what is wounded.
Practice love throughout.