I Thought I Was Learning. Turns Out, I Was Just Thinking About Learning.
Nov 29Lately, I’ve realized something uncomfortable about myself. I do too much in my head and almost nothing in real life.
Notes on code, work, thinking, and whatever else feels worth writing—irregularly published.
Lately, I’ve realized something uncomfortable about myself. I do too much in my head and almost nothing in real life.
If you’ve ever found yourself buried under too many open tabs — one for tasks, one for notes, one for your budget, and another for your workout plan — you’ll know the exact kind of chaos I was living in.
You know that classic dev saying: “Work smarter, not harder.” Yeah, I might’ve taken that a bit too literally.
Lately, I’ve noticed a pattern in myself. Every time I come up with a new idea for a project, I immediately feel like it’s going to be huge — like this could be the one. The next billion-dollar idea. The one that changes everything. It starts with a spark.
I used to think keeping the frontend and backend in sync was just part of the job — like merge conflicts or forgotten console logs.
A few years ago, I never thought that a keyboard — something I use every day without much thought — would completely change the way I work.