@kayla.ahraa: Crazy keeps you sane — Waylon knew it first and this shirt says it all 🎸 Drop a 🤠 if you live by this quote #waylonjennings #outlawcountry #countrymusic #musicshirt #countrylegend

Kayla Faith Geho
Kayla Faith Geho
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Sunday 05 July 2026 22:33:00 GMT
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When you start learning to code, you think the whole job is learning the language. Syntax, frameworks, the right course, the right roadmap. That's the part everyone talks about. But there's a second curriculum nobody hands you, and it's the one that actually decides whether you make it. Nobody teaches you how to sit with not knowing. How to open a problem you have no idea how to solve and stay calm long enough to work it out. Being completely stuck isn't a sign you're failing. It is the job. The whole job is being confused and slowly becoming less confused. Then there's reading other developers' code. Most of your work isn't writing fresh code; it's understanding what already exists, half of it undocumented, and figuring out why it works. That skill matters more than memorizing syntax, and no tutorial drills it into you. Also, nobody teaches you when to stop researching and start building. You can watch courses forever and feel productive while never actually building anything. At some point, you have to close the tutorial and start building something, even if it comes out bad, because the bad version teaches you what no course ever could. No one prepares you for imposter syndrome. The senior developer you look up to still Googles basic things, still feels lost in unfamiliar code, and still doubts themselves opening a new codebase. That feeling of not knowing enough never fully leaves. You just get more comfortable working anyway. The last one is patience. Progress can remain invisible for a long time. You can put in months before anything clicks. Showing up on the days you feel slow is the entire difference between the people who make it and the people who quit. The languages change. The frameworks change. This hidden curriculum is what carries you, and you only learn it by being consistent long enough to absorb it. If you're learning to code right now, this is the part **that catches everyone off guard**. It's also the part that makes you a real developer. What's something you had to learn the hard way that no tutorial taught you? #techtok #codingforbeginners #softwareengineer #programming #fyp
When you start learning to code, you think the whole job is learning the language. Syntax, frameworks, the right course, the right roadmap. That's the part everyone talks about. But there's a second curriculum nobody hands you, and it's the one that actually decides whether you make it. Nobody teaches you how to sit with not knowing. How to open a problem you have no idea how to solve and stay calm long enough to work it out. Being completely stuck isn't a sign you're failing. It is the job. The whole job is being confused and slowly becoming less confused. Then there's reading other developers' code. Most of your work isn't writing fresh code; it's understanding what already exists, half of it undocumented, and figuring out why it works. That skill matters more than memorizing syntax, and no tutorial drills it into you. Also, nobody teaches you when to stop researching and start building. You can watch courses forever and feel productive while never actually building anything. At some point, you have to close the tutorial and start building something, even if it comes out bad, because the bad version teaches you what no course ever could. No one prepares you for imposter syndrome. The senior developer you look up to still Googles basic things, still feels lost in unfamiliar code, and still doubts themselves opening a new codebase. That feeling of not knowing enough never fully leaves. You just get more comfortable working anyway. The last one is patience. Progress can remain invisible for a long time. You can put in months before anything clicks. Showing up on the days you feel slow is the entire difference between the people who make it and the people who quit. The languages change. The frameworks change. This hidden curriculum is what carries you, and you only learn it by being consistent long enough to absorb it. If you're learning to code right now, this is the part **that catches everyone off guard**. It's also the part that makes you a real developer. What's something you had to learn the hard way that no tutorial taught you? #techtok #codingforbeginners #softwareengineer #programming #fyp

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