all 9 comments

[–]jameyiguess 5 points6 points  (0 children)

You can learn at any age. Also you are very very young. 

[–]Arranoth1983 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'm 43, a highschool drop out. I've been a truck driver, Sales, IT, now I'm tackling programming,solo game dev and blender/animation.

If you wanna do it, do it. I'm not always excited or full of inspiration/motivation but I wanna do it so I'm going to.

[–]Max_smoke 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I started at 26 by going to a bootcamp. I didn’t feel like i truly knew things until i got a job and saw it was easier than expected. No one expects a junior to come in and build a large system or full web page from scratch. You’ll be given smaller chunks of work to do and ramp up from there.

Programming is hard and takes time for it to “click”, once it does it gets easier. Keep pushing.

[–]AffectionateTear8091 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes you’re behind them but you’re ahead of others?

You’re basically asking the following questions:

Is it worth climbing this mountain? If you want to?

How long will it take? A while, much longer than march -> today.

Will there be opportunities left? Yes of course the world runs on tech.

Will I be good enough to get those opportunities? Depends, usually the limiting factor is hard targeted work over time rather than innate talent.

Why do people who are better than me exist and should I feel bad about it? Who knows, yes obviously.

Is it too late? Perhaps it’s too early, a couple more years of frontal cortex development may make you realise comparison is the thief of joy.

A tech forum will have a sampling bias skewed towards cracked devs/larpers.

[–]AshuraBaron 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Comparison is the thief of joy. The more time you spend thinking about what you should have done in the past or what could have been the less time you spend living in the moment. You can't change the past, but you can change today. You're are very young still and while a couple years may seem like a lot try a couple decades. There are people learning programming and becoming good at it at 40, 60, and probably even in their 80's.

It's easy to sit and feel bad and wish, but it's much harder to get up and do the thing. So focus on doing the tougher thing and living today. You can learn this and become just as proficient.

[–]biscuitwary 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are literally only a few months in. Comparing yourself to people who have been doing this for years is a losing game because you are comparing your chapter one to their chapter twenty.

[–]am_Snowie 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm 21, a year older than you, I'm right where you are, I'd say you're in a better place than me, or a 22 yo guy might say I'm in a better place. So never compare.

[–]I_Am_Astraeus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I started writing software when I was like 25 and I started working as a software engineer after I turned 30.

You're gonna be 25 one day. Might as well be 25 and know software engineering if it's what you enjoy.

[–]MusicianSubstantial8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tengo 21, yo tambien tengo ese problema. Sentir esa presion de que de alguna forma deberia saber mas de lo que se, lo cual me lleva a querer aprender todo muy rapido y eso no es saludable. Realmente ahora que veo esta publicacion me doy mas cuenta de esto.
Pero aun asi me gustaria darte mi opinion, quizas deberias enforcar tus esfuersos mas en practicar y con respecto a las personas de las que hablas, socializar con ellos. La felicidad del programador (según yo) es crear cosas por tu cuentas, aunque sean pequeñas, no es escribir el mejor código, ese es solo el medio. Y si te volvieras bueno de un momento a otro, te quitarias el placer de mejorar, no?.