My Best Decision Professionally

Ғылым және технология

I have had a lot of success through the last 10 years in the industry. this is my single most important decision I've ever made. It has helped me through college, work, and everything else
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#vim #programming #softwareengineering

Пікірлер: 413

  • @guy_roh
    @guy_roh Жыл бұрын

    This is such a big thing. At the end of the day every single concept that A human understands can therefore be understood, and is never too hard to understand.

  • @ThePrimeagen

    @ThePrimeagen

    Жыл бұрын

    agreed

  • @hamm8934

    @hamm8934

    Жыл бұрын

    Maybe engineering concepts and architectures because they are man made. I don’t think this applies to high level mathematics and philosophy, especially ontology.

  • @guilhermealveslopes

    @guilhermealveslopes

    Жыл бұрын

    What helped me to also adopt that mindset is: So, I've played RuneScape a lot as a teenager and there was an "X" quest that I wanted to do so bad, because it had amazing story and exposed lots of lore (my favorite things in games: lore and world building), but there were tons upon tons of pre-requisite quests, what I learned was to calmly analyse the requisites, do them one by one, until I can finally do what I want. Learning is like that, sometimes you start something and you're like "hey I dont understand this at all!" but that is because you dont even get the fundamentals, or requirements to understand that, so instead of giving up, you can just think about it like a detective "hmmm, this little part of this thing I'm trying to understand, never seen it before, what does it do, where does it lead, what must I find about it? can it give me some insight on what i'm trying to understand and do?"

  • @alitekin7568

    @alitekin7568

    Жыл бұрын

    question is how much time it could take

  • @depressigor2257

    @depressigor2257

    Жыл бұрын

    did a interview for my first internship yesterday, they gave me today a case to solve, was really afraid but now im not, this video came in the right time, can´t thank you enough

  • @anthonytran1393
    @anthonytran1393 Жыл бұрын

    First time I've ever donated. My Senior engineer has this ethos with everything he does. You are truly helping me crystallise this mindset by just voicing it out. Massive thanks! Believe it or not. You're an inspiration many

  • @guitaripod
    @guitaripod Жыл бұрын

    Good video and message I will never forget the moment when software engineering clicked for me. I'm self-taught. It was four months into the first job. As a software engineer, I felt I knew what I was doing for the first time. Before that moment, I thought: "Am I able to do this?" After that moment, to this day: "How long will it take for me to do this?" “You can’t learn everything, but you must convince yourself that you can learn anything…” - John Carmack.

  • @ThePrimeagen

    @ThePrimeagen

    Жыл бұрын

    Let's go

  • @liquidcode1704
    @liquidcode1704 Жыл бұрын

    Dude I'm 100% there with you. There's nothing I can't do... there are only things I haven't done yet.

  • @adicide9070

    @adicide9070

    Жыл бұрын

    are you high? :D kzread.info/dash/bejne/oKB4m6ySgJvbZag.html

  • @diegolikescode

    @diegolikescode

    Жыл бұрын

    @@adicide9070 KKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKK classic.

  • @invictuz4803

    @invictuz4803

    Жыл бұрын

    Dude me too. I haven't done a 100% of things yet. But there's nothing I can't do!

  • @duduken20

    @duduken20

    Жыл бұрын

    Powerful sentence!

  • @gmoney9332
    @gmoney9332 Жыл бұрын

    “The impediment to action advances action. What stands in the way becomes the way.” -Marcus Aurelius

  • @samu350
    @samu350 Жыл бұрын

    After having a stress attack over a deadline catching up to me due to bad project management AND thinking I wouldn't be able to do it, this really helps me mentally.

  • @N3V3L

    @N3V3L

    Жыл бұрын

    YT1 PG2

  • @AnalyticMinded
    @AnalyticMinded Жыл бұрын

    This is something I've thought about recently while teaching myself mathematical logic: the further I progress, the more difficult the proofs become, and sometimes it feels like I've hit a dead end. I think "this is way beyond me, I'm not gonna be able to proceed any further". And time after time, I manage to pull through! Sometimes it feels like trying to break a big rock with a small hammer, but with persistence, that rock will have to give!

  • @asdqwe4427
    @asdqwe4427 Жыл бұрын

    Love it! I was asked to go to China to teach our coworkers about our fronted. Was I scared? Yes! Did I grow as a person? Yes! Living in regret is way scarier than public speaking.

  • @ThePrimeagen

    @ThePrimeagen

    Жыл бұрын

    such facts

  • @noitibmar
    @noitibmar Жыл бұрын

    I'm not actually a programmer, I'm an FX Animator, and I've absolutely had my fair share of imposter syndrome over the years. But I recently got asked to do an FX Design job, taking on more of a Lead role in the production and I'm so glad I said yes. Of course I've been terrified that I won't be good enough, or I'm not ready yet, but so far I think things are going well. I've designed a bunch of FX, shaped a significant amount of the look of the project I'm on, and hopefully I get to do this again cus I'm really enjoying the extra freedom it lends me x

  • @denzilv
    @denzilv Жыл бұрын

    I'm the same way. It's not that one can't figure things out, it's just how long that journey is. I remember joining the Labs team in 2014 and there was no guarantee that the team would exist a year in so we had to quickly create business value as we grew so we could stick around. I also remember Social Mountain. 🙂

  • @ThePrimeagen

    @ThePrimeagen

    Жыл бұрын

    yeah! it was good times

  • @mikloscsepella2743
    @mikloscsepella2743 Жыл бұрын

    man you're constantly demonstrating what a great human being you are

  • @geewiz70
    @geewiz70 Жыл бұрын

    One of the books that had the most impact on my life is "Mindset" by Carol Dweck. She describes how the Growth Mindset that ThePrimagen exhibits in this video is the more successful approach over the Fixed Mindset in which people limit themselves, thinking "Nah, I don't have enough talent for this to succeed."

  • @ChrisTitusTech
    @ChrisTitusTech Жыл бұрын

    I actually developed this same mentality but because I had to. My past employer had the main SAN fail and corrupted all the VMs across 4 hosts only a month into the job. Over 30 VMs needed to be restored and the backups weren't complete. I thought... this is impossible and can't be done. However, if I didn't do it, I'd be out of the job. At that point I was so mad that the company had such bad systems and instead of just walking off or just trying to get everything back the way it was. I said... "You know what, forget this, I'm just going to upgrade all the system to where they should be or just fall on my sword trying." For the next 3 days, I worked on about 30 minutes a sleep per day and restored active directory and base systems for function in the company all using a new server image I created. Called up a friend to help with the implementation of a new Citrix farm, as the old one was 6.0 and moved to 7.x. Restored all the SAP financial systems and within 2 weeks, not only was everything back, but everything was actually up to date and in a far better position. From that day forward, I have never thought of a problem too big. Only that it is going to be FAR easier to fix than that crazy situation. Once you do what you consider impossible, you will never think anything is impossible again.

  • @ThePrimeagen

    @ThePrimeagen

    Жыл бұрын

    I hope to instill this mentality into my children. Thank you for sharing this.

  • @blackfrog1534
    @blackfrog1534 Жыл бұрын

    Man this hits so close to home, and just at the right time, thank you Prime!

  • @Shri
    @Shri Жыл бұрын

    Thank you Mr Primeagen! Having a "I can do it. No biggie" attitude is perfect. Another important point that you can probably address in the next video: being stuck in learning/tutorial hell. Happens to me a lot when I am learning a new concept and have to consciously put effort to wrestle myself out of it. I enjoy learning new stuff so much that, when I am stuck in this "hell", I don't get shit done anymore as I spend all my time learning all the intricate details of that particular concept/language/whatever that I am reading about. Funny now that I think of it, I don't even know your actual name! Yet have made a tremendous impact on my life already. Thanks again!

  • @mindbdsm9036
    @mindbdsm9036 Жыл бұрын

    I just recently found out about your channel and I love it. There are so many valuable things I have had confirmed from you. I am trying to have the same approach as you have in regards of not saying no to things I dont know. Those are just extra challenges and so far I have overcome most of them, now and then there are some that are not worth it but then I externalize with which I also had a lot of problems. Some of the problems were due to imposter syndrome, but some I think might be related to behavior related to ADHD for which I finally reached out to get diagnosis. How I wish I could find someone like you as a mentor, but even this channels serves the purpose, partially in that role.

  • @neonraytracer8846
    @neonraytracer8846 Жыл бұрын

    This is the right mentality to have! Amazingly put into words and examples. It's such an important way of approaching new things. Its also called the student's mindset FYI

  • @gadgetboyplaysmc
    @gadgetboyplaysmc9 ай бұрын

    Ah man.. Prime, I never thought I'd feel like crying man. You have no idea how much you're helping me mentally right now. I just graduated 2 months ago, started my first real software engineering job where I'm more accountable for an actual project. There's a ton of pressure I've been feeling the past few weeks trying to deliver on time and being anxious if I actually deserve to be an engineer. It's tough running into more difficult problems compared to just working on fun side projects to get hired. I'm constantly feeling like I might get fired because some of the problems I run into are so overwhelming. Even worse when the requirement is seemingly easy yet it takes me a long time to figure out. Everything you said here just feels like a good pat in the back, man. Thank you!

  • @cielohilario4339
    @cielohilario43399 ай бұрын

    This is just the thing that I needed to hear. Thank you for making videos like this!

  • @winnie-the-bish
    @winnie-the-bish11 ай бұрын

    100%. The biggest advancements in my career have come from me saying yes to the big, scary and uncertain problems that others thought you'd be crazy to tackle

  • @winstonstrongarm8929
    @winstonstrongarm8929 Жыл бұрын

    Needed to hear this. Have no issue thinking that way, but it stems from thinking I'm shit🤣 hard to remember to see how far you've come when the problems never get "easy"

  • @IlyaZub
    @IlyaZub Жыл бұрын

    Can relate. I've found the feeling "can do anything" years ago. We completed a 1300 km bicycle trip in less than 13 days iirk. The trip was fun and very hard. Now I understand how many dangers we avoided and I thank God for that. Starting from that, I try to be patient while solving problems. Often I forget and rush, feel bad, forget about the problem for the few days, return back, and solve it. Or, don't return to the problem at all. That's also fine. Patience and enjoying the process are a few parts of feeling good for me. As one book says, "the road is made by walking".

  • @Alyyyyyyyy123
    @Alyyyyyyyy1232 ай бұрын

    Finished my first project at my first full time job last Thursday. I'm more comfortable with frontend but was hired as a backend engineer cause I knew enough . The project was given to me at my 2nd week and tbh I was and still am overwhelmed. I have a lot of imposter syndrome, made a lot of small mistakes, and a bunch of hurdles. But even then, I knew I'll be able to do it somehow. Good thing I have good and understanding seniors to help me with how I should approach certain things. At my lowest point during that project where I'm questioning if I'll be even be able to pull this project off. I stumbled upon this vid and gave me the needed pep talk to continue. That experience really gave me the confidence and validation for myself that even if I'm not good atm, I'm competent enough right now that I will be. Thanks Prime for helping me through my self taught dev journey!

  • @branpod
    @branpod Жыл бұрын

    One of my favorite videos of yours (although I’ll happily watch just about anything from you). Big inspiration for CS students such as myself

  • @oliverdenton4216
    @oliverdenton4216 Жыл бұрын

    These are my favourite videos of yours, dude. This and the last 'vim as your editor' video. The just fucking do it mentality. Being reminded there's no shortcuts and you have it in you if you just try. Appreciate you, man.

  • @ThePrimeagen

    @ThePrimeagen

    Жыл бұрын

    np :)

  • @jasonscherer2631
    @jasonscherer2631 Жыл бұрын

    Love this so much. If it wasn't for me taking the time and learning the computer testing system at work and be willing to learn Perl, I would never be in the position I'm in now. It has grown my knowledge so much and love it.

  • @esquilo_atomico
    @esquilo_atomico Жыл бұрын

    Man, youre an inspiration for me. Thanks for putting out those videos

  • @sebwylleman
    @sebwylleman Жыл бұрын

    Love the content you're posting, this is so useful, keep it up mate!

  • @Ceneka
    @Ceneka Жыл бұрын

    PHP: got it Lambo: next problem to solve I agree but at the same time I feel like is saying to someone "stop being depressed". Tho a good reminder that you are capable it's always good 🤘

  • @nicolasguyon4943
    @nicolasguyon4943 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for this video, it's really inspiring. I have the same mentality as you but still experience imposter syndrome. Never thought of using this "I know I'll find a way to make it work" mentality as an imposter syndrome countermeasure.

  • @jupyter5k647
    @jupyter5k647 Жыл бұрын

    The flow of your videos man............ Such a smooth transition from shit-talk to real-life-actual-serious-and-helpful-advice to back to shit-talk. Absolutely killed it man, and of course I'll keep this piece of info securely in my info vault and try to shift my gears towards this mentality :^ ]

  • @azatecas
    @azatecas Жыл бұрын

    this is great man. im just starting out my career. i ended up going the self taught route so i keep doubtong myself even thohgh i always find a solution and im two years in. i gotta enjoy the process more instead of worrying about the bad concequences

  • @taylorallred6208
    @taylorallred6208 Жыл бұрын

    This is so true. Whenever I’m feeling daunted by a task in front of me I usually avoid it for as long as possible. I can usually get the ball rolling if I ask myself: what is it that I don’t get and how do I learn about that thing? You just have to trust that you can learn new things and that it’s ok not to know immediately. That’s what makes programming fun and fresh.

  • @JackDespero
    @JackDespero11 ай бұрын

    Same with doctoral thesis. Most people have a very conflicted relationship with their doctoral thesis. You know it inside out, every problem, every compromise that you had to do because the data were not exactly right, "if only I could have done this or that" or "if that they it hadn't been raining", etc. And then you see other people's thesis and they are so nice, so meaningful, so full of great data. But in reality they are exactly the same, you just do not know their work inside out as you know your own.

  • @officialraylong
    @officialraylong6 ай бұрын

    Great advice!!! I have to tackle a bug in a language I don't know on a platform that's new to me... and I was dreading it until watching this video.

  • @theodorealenas3171
    @theodorealenas3171 Жыл бұрын

    There's 2 things people hate: - long term benefit - putting fun into life itself And I'd say you don't hate them, you got them right, and I hope I do too in the future. What people want is: - immediate catchy (tik tok yes, Vim no) - to pause life and drink expensive coffees Not that this is bad, there are artists who split life into drawing and working for a job and they do well. Also if "risks" panic someone too much they can make life more frustrating for them. But as soon as you can afford the better route you should go for it.

  • @anthonyh618
    @anthonyh618 Жыл бұрын

    This is a great reminder man. Agree wholeheartedly. Always volunteer for the things you don’t know how to do.

  • @hypergraphic
    @hypergraphic Жыл бұрын

    This is right on, especially for us self taught devs. Preach it prime!

  • @Rob-in7vp
    @Rob-in7vp Жыл бұрын

    Needed this right now man, thank you.

  • @augustogoncalez6625
    @augustogoncalez6625 Жыл бұрын

    Seriously, I needed that! Very glad I watched that video!!

  • @nathannowack6459
    @nathannowack6459 Жыл бұрын

    Man this is a great channel to have found rn, on a new backend team where things are complex + new so i appreciate the words

  • @Coneness
    @Coneness Жыл бұрын

    BROTHER, YOU ARE THE BEST!!! You oooh really helped me!! THANK YOU VERY MUCH!

  • @italoguajardopenaloza7516
    @italoguajardopenaloza7516 Жыл бұрын

    I love these videos. Most of the time I the same mentality. I don't like to do frontend work but now my manager is asking me to do some shit on frontend, I was thinking fk it, I'm not a frontend engineer, but now watching your video I gained motivation

  • @Camx-im7bd
    @Camx-im7bd Жыл бұрын

    Amazing video as always man. Really inspired me to get out there more!

  • @JoelSilva-gk4hq
    @JoelSilva-gk4hq Жыл бұрын

    You're not wrong Prime. AND I KNOW IT but my brain is trying to come up with reasons why I still don't do it. BRAIN SHUT UP! We did it before, we can do it again!!

  • @ThePrimeagen

    @ThePrimeagen

    Жыл бұрын

    you know ,we tell ourselves many things and some of them are lies

  • @richsadowsky8580
    @richsadowsky8580 Жыл бұрын

    Well said. I say the same thing in my podcast and to the hundreds of programmers I work with. Don't say no, be open to the opportunities that surround you everyday but most people don't see. Seize the moment and trust your experience and instincts. Find a mentor. Be a mentor. I could go on for 30 minutes about every opportunity I simple discovered and took. My career was like a Disney ride through the technology industry! I make sure every new job is a new challenge compared to what I've done before. People are paralyzed with fear of failure. You need to get over that because you will fail a lot. One mentor once told me if you aren't failing big enough that you get fired every now and then, you aren't taking big enough risks. Still letting that bounce around my head 38 years later but he was telling me to challenge conventional wisdom when it wasn't, Try new approaches that shatter golden calves. Fail fast and often. Eventually you will land at a place where the vibrations are just right and you operate at your highest. It's such a fun and always surprising industry we're in.

  • @PigletPorch
    @PigletPorch Жыл бұрын

    The obstacle is the way. Marvelous vid and mindset, Mr Prime!

  • @ooogabooga5111
    @ooogabooga5111 Жыл бұрын

    yes this has been my mentality too after the 3rd year in my college. I finally understood I am capable of solving anything if I put my mind to it.

  • @electricimpulsetoprogramming
    @electricimpulsetoprogramming Жыл бұрын

    This video changed my life, you solved a mental dilemma I was having, thanks.

  • @pondopondo1497
    @pondopondo1497 Жыл бұрын

    I'm a mediocre engineer at best but using this simple logic in the video I've been able to be also a mediocre 3d animator, learned a few game engines as well. I'm able to contribute on any project I'm in just cause I was interested to tinker with shit others didn't have / want to. Even if I know that shit will take me 2 or 3 weeks more than, lets say, Prime need, Ama still do it cause why not.

  • @FaraazAhmad
    @FaraazAhmad Жыл бұрын

    Thanks Prime! I just joined a new job and was having a bit of imposter syndrome. I saw this video and worked some extra on the weekend and figured out how to proceed. I'm a lot less worried now

  • @samdcbu
    @samdcbu Жыл бұрын

    “Driving a Lambo, writing PHP” lol

  • @ThePrimeagen

    @ThePrimeagen

    Жыл бұрын

    its a straight up call out

  • @thefekete
    @thefekete Жыл бұрын

    Don't expect every opportunity to work out easily. I once got in a project (embedded C, power electronics) that we quoted for 3 months and 1.5 years later we "finished" it. It was the hardest thing I ever did, and in the end we realized we kinda sorta solved a problem no one else was stupid enough to even try... Hardest thing I ever did, biggest financial loss our company had in the last 10 years, and although finished, never actually made it into production, but in the end a highlight I can still be proud of and my managers see it the same. Try and even fail sometimes, but never accept defeat.

  • @JT-mr3db
    @JT-mr3db Жыл бұрын

    I REALLY appreciate these nice and short vids that get straight to the point. Tried watching the twitch streams but there’s just too much tomfoolery and exaggerated malarkey.

  • @alexbecar977
    @alexbecar977 Жыл бұрын

    It's like that movie quote, when it's feels scary tu jump in that's exactly when you jump, nice video prime!

  • @surajthakkar
    @surajthakkar Жыл бұрын

    Wow! This pumped me up. Thanks I needed this!!

  • @TheCartographeraoe
    @TheCartographeraoe Жыл бұрын

    Keep moving forward! Awesome message bro

  • @yashchoudhary1193
    @yashchoudhary1193 Жыл бұрын

    THANK YOU!! THIS WAS THE BEST AND EASIEST TUTORIAL

  • @scottiedoesno
    @scottiedoesno Жыл бұрын

    I've really only struggled with imposter syndrome very temporarily and I think that a big part of that was always choosing to believe that I could make it happen. I'm not sure where that decision came from, but you always do a great job of reminding me of that fact

  • @ThePrimeagen

    @ThePrimeagen

    Жыл бұрын

    Yayayayaya

  • @Korudo
    @Korudo Жыл бұрын

    Yep, I need to adopt this fully right now. Thanks!

  • @CharlesChacon
    @CharlesChacon Жыл бұрын

    Started watching your channel with imposter syndrome about being actually able to use vim in a really great way, but now I’m making one addition at a time and coming back to your vids to try the next thing. Let me know when you start issuing degrees in vimology

  • @jerry9548
    @jerry9548 Жыл бұрын

    Had to create an outlook plugin for a client lately. I really didn‘t want to do it because I didn’t have a lot of time and the only way to get some information was the official Microsoft documentation. I did it anyways and when I had to hand the project over to my colleague last week I actually realized that I knew so much stuff that wasn‘t even mentioned in the docs and I found and reported several bugs with office.js. It is such a great feeling to be a „pro“ in a specific area.

  • @KevinNaughtonJr
    @KevinNaughtonJr Жыл бұрын

    so simple and so true, if you spend enough time you'll eventually solve the problem at hand

  • @vuongtran5799
    @vuongtran5799 Жыл бұрын

    I'm in your situation at the moment, I'm afraid, after watching your video, I feel more scared now 🤣 thanks for advices, it's great to hear some positive thinking!

  • @2bloodyfox
    @2bloodyfox2 ай бұрын

    Just true! 🙂3 years ago I coudnt realise to be in business... but now seems just normal part of my life

  • @flakes57
    @flakes57 Жыл бұрын

    I completely agree with this, it has opened several doors for me and I suffer from a crapload of impostor syndrome. Nothing feels better than showing the impostor within me that he was wrong.

  • @ThePrimeagen

    @ThePrimeagen

    Жыл бұрын

    feels good

  • @felixcusson2930
    @felixcusson2930 Жыл бұрын

    I was task at work with creating the base architecture for a library so our team ca interact with the seller partner API from Amazon. The authentication is done using sigv4 from AWS. How ever I read the documentation, I couldn't get how to implement it correctly, but I pushed through on and we now have a custom signer that we can use internally and that since it's custom we can make modifications to fit our processes. If I though it was just too hard to implement, we probably would be running some half-assed code from stack overflow that we didn't really understand.

  • @Hermeneus10
    @Hermeneus1011 ай бұрын

    Thank you for sharing this. Ten years of programming and there's still always a niggle that "I’m doing it the wrong way, I don’t know enough and I can’t do it”. It’s weird how one forgets the past solved problems and hurdles in the moment because of fear … but this was great motivation. Will keep your ideas and positive energy in mind.

  • @scifarer
    @scifarer Жыл бұрын

    This makes me think of a Picard quote from TNG: "There's a way out of every box, a solution to every puzzle. It's just a matter of finding it."

  • @qqqqqq529
    @qqqqqq52910 ай бұрын

    "i don't want to watch the game, i want to be in the game." I'm gonna write this down and put it on my wall facing my workstation. Thanks man, good one.

  • @jhaime9741
    @jhaime9741 Жыл бұрын

    I'm currently a college student, and one of my classmates asked me to help him create a simple web app written in PHP. At first, I didn't really like the idea of investing my time in learning PHP because, from what I know, there are better languages or frameworks to invest in. But I still took it because I'm curious, and I enjoyed it. Since then I have kept taking risks for the sake of knowledge.

  • @Wandering_Horse
    @Wandering_Horse Жыл бұрын

    I used to have a kick ass mentality, there was nothing I couldn't do. Team Get Shit Done! Now my current job has broken me, every attempted step forward is met with a big F you, not today MF'er. Like constantly telling a child they are stupid, they start to believe it. I am now team Get Nothing Done. The best decision I can make right now is to walk away from a demoralizing, negative and unfulfilling job. Even the boss's dog hates me! (⁠´⁠;⁠︵⁠;⁠`⁠)

  • @ThePrimeagen

    @ThePrimeagen

    Жыл бұрын

    hah, well when these things happen you have to ask yourself 2 things. 1. are you doing it in a way that breeds upsetness with everyone else? Meaning, "hey, this is the best way to do it!" 2. perhaps you are at the wrong place the goodnews though is that you get to practice patience and grace. its a great skill, though VERY hard to do

  • @braybilly

    @braybilly

    Жыл бұрын

    I was in the same position. And yes, being made to feel stupid started to make me act stupid. Even basic east stuff I would forget everything and panic. I found a new job and all my confidence and productivity are back. I had to take a $30k pay cut but it was the best employment decision I ever made. Hang in there and start looking.

  • @cristobaljavier
    @cristobaljavier Жыл бұрын

    Great video, so much value in it, thanks prime

  • @irvinghenriquez8231
    @irvinghenriquez8231 Жыл бұрын

    Just started a new job for the government as a jr developer. I needed to hear this. Thank you

  • @_Karlsson
    @_Karlsson Жыл бұрын

    Believing you can solve anything comes with having conquered high threshold difficulties before and overcome them. Do something that seem more messy and complex than you think you can handle and untangle it, and you learn that every problem is just a set of smaller problems.

  • @JonasThente-ji5xx
    @JonasThente-ji5xx3 ай бұрын

    Very true, I have had this mentality since i started working day 1. I have been dominating at my different jobs. I never say no. I do whatever is being asked. Doesn't matter if it's a shitty 20 year old codebase or whatever. From never saying no, I now have professional experience from Python, C#, C++, C, Swift, JavaScript, Java, etc.

  • @halcyonramirez6469
    @halcyonramirez646910 ай бұрын

    I really needed to hear this. Thank you.

  • @bhargavpandya8850
    @bhargavpandya8850 Жыл бұрын

    I love this mentality of yours!

  • @velho6298
    @velho6298 Жыл бұрын

    This is so human take, awesome stuff Prime!

  • @manhkhang7732
    @manhkhang7732 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you Prime, this hits home for me

  • @ficolas2
    @ficolas29 ай бұрын

    I have slowly been realizing this. I began thinking to myself "in the end, its just code, im good with code, it'll just take longer but its just code" I have approached so many things thinking I wouldnt be able to do it, to then be able to do it, sometimes doing it pretty easily too,

  • @rootbeernineteen135
    @rootbeernineteen135 Жыл бұрын

    This is a big dog post, and more juniors need to hear it. It writes home to what my motive has been on the products I build at work and on the side when I feel like it, you’re either a cheetah or sloth in software-land

  • @AbhinavGunwant
    @AbhinavGunwant Жыл бұрын

    Always look forward to a video from the two ti... ah, I mean ThePrimeagen!

  • @richardramirez1025
    @richardramirez1025 Жыл бұрын

    Totally agree. I simply think any challenge we encounter in coding has already been solved by someone somewhere and if they can do it, so can I.

  • @kaioh33
    @kaioh33 Жыл бұрын

    Man this is so so motivating damn. 🔥🔥🙌🏽

  • @CodeZinc
    @CodeZinc Жыл бұрын

    What you are saying is, i think happens to all of the software engineers and personally speaking i have faced these sitations like 10-15 times till now, And this is the only way to grow, if we dont challenge ourselves there will be no growing at all.

  • @othman31415
    @othman31415 Жыл бұрын

    I totally agree! One should face life's challenges with some courage. One unrelated question: what are your thoughts on Spring boot?

  • @ThePrimeagen

    @ThePrimeagen

    Жыл бұрын

    no thoughts on spring boot

  • @tonyramirez5707
    @tonyramirez5707 Жыл бұрын

    This doesn't apply just for programming, gold content like always man.

  • @JacksonMarshal
    @JacksonMarshal Жыл бұрын

    Damn, this made me rethink my choices. Thx for the advices

  • @PretzelLogic88
    @PretzelLogic88 Жыл бұрын

    love this. need to practice this mindset myself

  • @ThePrimeagen

    @ThePrimeagen

    Жыл бұрын

    lets go !!

  • @jamess.2491
    @jamess.2491 Жыл бұрын

    Not exactly the same situation, but when I was a developer I got offered a position by one of my friends in a VC firm. Basically everyone I talked to at my current company and my friends in tech told me not to take it because I wouldn't know what I was doing. I ended up taking it and obviously there was a lot of overhead I needed to learn but you just have to be willing to do it. Most people, especially devs for some reason, are petrified of taking risks, but you will never get anywhere in your career if you can't learn to be comfortable with that. At the end of the day, theres only a certain level you can reach within a company, and you will almost never be able to work your way up all the way into management. It's sad, but really the only way to advance your career now is by jumping around, which most people don't want to do.

  • @indrajitsarkar3169
    @indrajitsarkar3169 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this, I needed it

  • @sorcdk2880
    @sorcdk2880 Жыл бұрын

    So this is basically just self-confidence, and imposter syndrom is to a large part a lack of self.confidence. Personally I have something of a similar outlook, but more in terms of "I know it will work out, it always does", which is a form of self-confidence built up over a long time and lots of successes, especially successes where you are pushing boundaries in some way, such as less effort or working on things you are not an expert in.

  • @drxyd
    @drxyd Жыл бұрын

    Lol, reminds me of all the crazy things I've thrown myself into. Good advice.

  • @thomaschin6363
    @thomaschin6363 Жыл бұрын

    As someone early in their SWE career, this is definitely something I needed to here, and I'm sure there are drones of others who are early (or even not-early) in their career that need to here this as well. ThePrimeagen really out here being the SWE content creator we need, but don't deserve.

  • @SimoneColaci
    @SimoneColaci Жыл бұрын

    this is so true, I see all kind of people making themselves miserables and is very, very sad. But this is also fault of management, your job is not the most important in the world, people fail and please, just take the risk

  • @hacktor_92
    @hacktor_92 Жыл бұрын

    huh. i like that we're on the same page with this. i had the opportunity to make video games, so i did it when noone else could. my boss wanted to reject the idea but i said "let me do this", so he let me. i have the opportunity now to teach some new folks php so i can move on to write even more rust code. because, you know what? nowadays you'll have to be an opportunist in order to get right where you want, or else you'll be dismissed without any second thought. and i've learned that the hard way.

  • @marcin4755
    @marcin4755 Жыл бұрын

    its called self efficacy

  • @ThePrimeagen

    @ThePrimeagen

    Жыл бұрын

    haven't heard that term before

  • @nge1301

    @nge1301

    Жыл бұрын

    Sounds way cooler and more credible than "just believe in yourself and in your own potential!"

  • @blipojones2114
    @blipojones2114 Жыл бұрын

    Best decision I made, to take a 6 month break, after 3 months in a new job I finally got, was made tech lead of my team, 100% remote, living in a country with 50% living cost. That mindset you describe in the video is 100% the way to go.

  • @sharoncohen318
    @sharoncohen3189 ай бұрын

    When I told my boss I want to take on more backend tasks and challenges/ new tasks that are not what I have been working on, he said "ok but I expect you to do it at the same level and speed as you do the tasks you do have experience in". Like LOL as if that is even possible, I am all for taking on challenges but you have to be somewhere where your boss understands that it will be, well a challenge for you if it's new.

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