Learning by Breaking Things on Purpose
Sometimes the fastest way to understand how something works is to take it apart, push it too far, or let it fall apart in your hands.
Sometimes the fastest way to understand how something works is to take it apart, push it too far, or let it fall apart in your hands.
Motivation doesn’t always arrive politely in daylight; sometimes it taps on your shoulder long after the world has gone quiet.
Sometimes a film you’ve seen a dozen times reveals a lesson you were never ready to understand before.
Some walks don’t feel like walks at all — they feel like you accidentally stepped into the background of a story being filmed.
A vivid, high-energy novel about fleeting brilliance, emotional aftershocks, and the courage to rebuild in the glow of what’s been shattered.
AI isn’t replacing developers—it’s expanding what one developer can do.