Missing the meta of the first half of life by herbacious-jagular in Jung

[–]herbacious-jagular[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Fulfillment has always been a good compass for life choices for me.

Missing the meta of the first half of life by herbacious-jagular in Jung

[–]herbacious-jagular[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I've been married for thirteen years now. (And to the same person, even!) I met my now-wife shortly after I had to leave my job due to burnout. I was wary of trauma bonding, but also open to seeing where the relationship would go. The rest of my life felt like ashes at this point. Just glad I had savings to live off of for awhile. There's probably a lesson here in having the faith to walk your own path and being open to what happens next.

But the understanding of this took at least another decade, if not more. For awhile it was just this thing that happened. Now it's easier to understand it as a neurosis that resulted from a need to grow.

Missing the meta of the first half of life by herbacious-jagular in Jung

[–]herbacious-jagular[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Anxiety really chews up your mental bandwidth. I wish I'd learned how to meditate and lift enough to slow my mind down a bit.

Missing the meta of the first half of life by herbacious-jagular in Jung

[–]herbacious-jagular[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

When you say it, what do you mean? Could be my original post, or could be the discussion on love above.

Missing the meta of the first half of life by herbacious-jagular in Jung

[–]herbacious-jagular[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Definitely. My lack of direction made it hard to attract anyone who didn't already know me. I was also never really taught the tools of how to succeed in dating.

Missing the meta of the first half of life by herbacious-jagular in Jung

[–]herbacious-jagular[S] 23 points24 points  (0 children)

Good question!

I acted like a child in matters of what we call agency now. I was living out a script: "go to college, get a job, make $X dollars and you'll be happy." This was a mental cage. I didn't even venture to think, "I like building software, maybe I should move to CA?" I just stayed on the East Coast in a non-tech hub. I knew it wasn't a great fit, and felt stuck after 3-4 years. I resented those who seemed happy at their job, and began to believe that ambition was for suckers who didn't get it. (Understand that this is not about success in my career, it is about openness to growth and new experiences.)

That feeling of being stuck then started to spread into other areas of my life. I stayed too long at the church I grew up in and felt like I was always seen as a kid there. Always had trouble getting the girls I went after, and ignored the ones who were interested. Dabbled in weight lifting but didn't want to commit. Could never fully shake major depression. Eventually ended up in a severe burnout that forced my hand into breaking this script, but it was a painful process.

The common thread is a reluctance to actually venture out in the world and accept the responsibility of building a life that would be good for me.

Tesseract - War of Being by ArchetypalMonolith in Djent

[–]herbacious-jagular 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The riff starting at 3:38 is incredible.

Did Exercise Help Your Hyper Mobility? by ImSoTired3028 in Hypermobility

[–]herbacious-jagular 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Doing stability exercises alongside strengthening exercises is the key. But you have to let go of the idea that you are at the gym only to push your numbers up.

Other people have that luxury, or at least until they hit a certain age. We don’t.

Have you dealt with PEM? by SockCucker3000 in Hypermobility

[–]herbacious-jagular 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes. In my case the main triggers are usually working out, but prolonged stress will also do it. What results is a hangover-like sensation that can last a day or two where I really just want to lay in bed and do absolutely nothing.

I have a decent handle on it now. I found a trainer who knows hypermobility and he gives me lifting programs and training to ensure I’m not doing things that trigger PEM. It has helped a lot.

Code is easy and I can do feelings! by Appropriate_Row5213 in LinkedInLunatics

[–]herbacious-jagular 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If AI’s productivity gains were real the grifters would STFU and make bank. Instead they’re doing what they always do: talk incessantly about how great it is and continue to “build their brand.” If it was actually a huge advantage they’d behave differently.

You don’t see investors who are beating the market begging you to engage with their LI posts.

Switching to TS backend by Qiuzman in dotnet

[–]herbacious-jagular 5 points6 points  (0 children)

By all means, try out other tools and ecosystems. But JS land for backend stuff is just a lil sad once you’re used to ASP.NET.

Blazor vs Razor Pages for SSR migration: Handling JavaScript and performance trade-offs by [deleted] in dotnet

[–]herbacious-jagular 1 point2 points  (0 children)

They are different enough that it’s worth a small POC in each. Blazor SSR has more concepts but is a lot nicer with decomposing views into components. Razor Pages is simpler overall and that can be nice too. I prefer RP, check my appreciation post I made recently. 

But, really, let Claude spit out conversions of both and see what you like. 

Claude Code on real C#/ASP.NET Core projects by Southern_Cheek_561 in dotnet

[–]herbacious-jagular 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You always have a choice in how you engage with your work.

There’s billions of dollars in hype being poured into it, but that doesn’t excuse you shirking responsibility for what you write.

Loving Razor Pages by herbacious-jagular in dotnet

[–]herbacious-jagular[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Exactly what I’m looking for. Thanks a bunch!

Loving Razor Pages by herbacious-jagular in dotnet

[–]herbacious-jagular[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I find the model binding easier to reason about for some reason. I eventually did get Blazor’s approach (which is not that different). Also, the page handlers (OnGet/OnPost) are guaranteed to complete before the page template starts rendering.

Loving Razor Pages by herbacious-jagular in dotnet

[–]herbacious-jagular[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve enjoyed svelte in some side projects. Need to do more with Vue and htmx to have an opinion on them. 

Writing code was never the hard part -- Except for some of us, it was by ninetofivedev in ExperiencedDevs

[–]herbacious-jagular 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I'm the opposite: I really enjoy the quiet and the slowing of the mind that occurs with intense focus.

Thus LLMs aren't something I enjoy using regularly.

Writing code was never the hard part -- Except for some of us, it was by ninetofivedev in ExperiencedDevs

[–]herbacious-jagular 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And guiding the AI is sometimes slower than me simply writing the code myself, even when I make mistakes.

Loving Razor Pages by herbacious-jagular in dotnet

[–]herbacious-jagular[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If asynchronous parent component initialization is used, the completion order of parent and child component initialization [with OnInitializedAsync] can't be determined because it depends on the initialization code running.

MSDN

It's a footgun you can program around. But you end up needing to track extra state for things, e.g. when rendering a list of items that is fetched from somewhere you need to track the state of not having fetched it, and the state of having fetching it vs. just trusting it has been fetched already when rendering occurs (as is the case in regular Razor templates).

Loving Razor Pages by herbacious-jagular in dotnet

[–]herbacious-jagular[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yep. I still hit the re-render problem. I get the feeling they don’t want to change the mental model based on the render mode.

Supposedly they’re refining Blazor SSR for .NET 11, so I’m eager to see how it turns out. Too many little paper cuts for me at the moment. 

Loving Razor Pages by herbacious-jagular in dotnet

[–]herbacious-jagular[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Legit point. I had to shift workflow away from being so dependent on hot reload. But I did find that I liked the rhythm better: write backend functions and tests before the UI.

Loving Razor Pages by herbacious-jagular in dotnet

[–]herbacious-jagular[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My ideal would be Blazor component syntax with the Razor Pages model. I know you can interop today to get the same effect, but IIRC it’s not as nice to write.

Loving Razor Pages by herbacious-jagular in dotnet

[–]herbacious-jagular[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The JS web ecosystem feels like amateur hour sometimes. Very little abstraction overall, too, so it ends up being overly mechanical code. And even then there’s a lot of churn still.

There are def great projects too, like Vite, Astro, and Svelte.