Most people want to become software engineers…
But they quit after 2 weeks of errors.
The truth?
Confusion is part of the process.
Every bug you fix = one step ahead of 90% of people who gave up.
Stay.
Big lesson: AI isn’t magic. I spent days tweaking prompts, only to realize the problem wasn’t the tool it was my rushed assumptions. Do your homework before debugging tech. #AILessons#TechReality
If I had to start coding again, I’d do this:
1. Pick ONE language
2. Build small projects daily
3. Stop chasing tutorials
4. Learn by breaking things
Simple. Not easy.
Reply “START” if you want a roadmap.
My thoughts, focus on learning and being reliable. You don’t need to know everything just be willing to ask questions and improve every day.
Take your work seriously, even small tasks, and try to understand things deeply, not just follow instructions. Your growth is what really matters at this stage.
Most people quit coding when it gets hard.
Top engineers?
That’s when they get curious.
Debugging at 2AM, breaking things, fixing them again — that’s the real grind no one tweets about.
Consistency > talent.
Keep showing up. Your breakthrough commit is closer than you think. 🚀
Everyone is talking about AI.
Very few are actually building with it.
The fastest way to stand out in 2026:
- Pick a small problem
- Build an AI solution
- Ship it in public
- Repeat weekly
- No courses. No overthinking.
Just shipping.
That’s the new resume.
#buildinpublic #AI #dev