I went from a frustrated Amazon FBA seller buried in spreadsheets to a full-stack founder shipping my own SaaS.
I didn't have a CS degree or a fancy network.
Here's the story of how I turned my own business pain into the products I build today.
The Codex team killed it with compaction.
Been using the app to manage tasks through pinned threads and automations.
The biggest thing I’ve noticed is how much more useful agents becomes when context sticks around.
It can tell what’s already been done, what’s changed since yesterday, and what still needs attention without having to re-explain everything.
Way better than living in fresh chat sessions all day.
Across every niche I've worked in, I've noticed the same thing:
The gap between people who win and people who don't usually comes down to two traits.
1. They don't assume other people are special.
They understand they're not fundamentally different from the person they're looking up to. They don't create imaginary barriers before they've even started.
Most people fail in their head long before reality has a chance to decide.
Take the loss after you lose. Measure by facts, not self-doubt.
2. They learn by doing.
The people who go furthest are rarely the ones consuming the most content.
They're the ones implementing.
I've never been the most academic person in any field I've succeeded in. I've always learned by building, shipping, failing, and adjusting.
That process creates something way more valuable than knowledge: confidence.
The confidence that if you can figure out one thing, you can probably figure out the next thing too.
Thoughts from someone who's been building things on the internet since 2016.
something nobody tells you about leaving the 9-5 structure behind
your days become dangerously self-directed
no one setting the tone
no forced schedule
barely any meetings
just you deciding what matters every morning
curious how other founders structure around that mentally