đ± Echoes of Experience: Finding My Voice in Tech
I didnât grow up imagining myself in tech. For a long time, I thought âreal developersâ were people who looked nothing like me, spoke in acronyms I didnât understand, and seemed to have been coding since they were toddlers. My path into this world was quieter, slower, and full of moments where I wondered whether I truly belonged.
đ§ The Early Barriers No One Warned Me About
When I first started learning to code, the biggest challenge wasnât JavaScript or CSSâit was confidence.
I walked into every room feeling like I had to prove I deserved to be there. I worried that asking questions would expose me, that making mistakes would confirm everyoneâs suspicions, and that being âdifferentâ meant being âless than.â
But the truth is: tech is full of people who feel like outsiders, even if they donât say it out loud.
đ The Turning Point
Everything shifted the day I met a mentor who told me, âYou donât have to know everything. You just have to stay curious.â
That one sentence changed how I approached learning. Instead of trying to be perfect, I focused on being persistent. Instead of hiding my questions, I started asking better ones. Instead of shrinking myself, I started taking up space.
And slowly, the industry stopped feeling like a gated community and started feeling like a place I could help shape.
đ What Iâve Learned Along the Way
A few lessons I carry with me:
Your background is not a weaknessâitâs a perspective.
The way you see the world will help you solve problems others overlook.
Community matters more than raw skill.
The people who uplift you, challenge you, and collaborate with you will shape your career more than any tutorial.
Representation isnât optional.
When someone sees you thriving, it gives them permission to imagine themselves thriving too.
You donât need permission to start.
Whether youâre switching careers, learning your first language, or returning after a breakâyour journey is valid.
đŹ A Message to Anyone Who Feels Like an Outsider
If youâve ever felt invisible in this industry, I want you to know this: you belong here.
Not because youâve mastered every framework or built the perfect portfolio, but because tech needs your voice, your story, and your lived experience.
And to allies: your supportâyour advocacy, your amplification, your willingness to listenâcreates the conditions where people like me can grow roots instead of just surviving.
đ Looking Forward
Iâm still learning. Iâm still growing. Iâm still finding my voice.
But now, instead of wondering whether I belong, Iâm focused on helping others see that they do too.
If my story echoes even a small part of your own, I hope it reminds you that your journey is worth sharingâand that someone out there needs to hear it.
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