From 433689f4dddbec1ed2ea57a78f747bcd2c26fadc Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Craig Maloney Date: Sun, 1 Jul 2018 09:37:00 -0400 Subject: [PATCH] Acknloedging the feelings that we have --- chapter05.md | 6 ++++++ 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+) diff --git a/chapter05.md b/chapter05.md index e2a0002..7781a49 100644 --- a/chapter05.md +++ b/chapter05.md @@ -17,3 +17,9 @@ So how do we balance these feelings of wanting to be on all the time while allow ## Lights out First we need to acknowledge that we can't be on all the time. You may know this intuitively and think "yes, of course" but acknowledging that you need to have a period where you are not programming, not thinking about programming, and not being a programmer is vital to your well-being. You need to have moments where you can turn off the programmer part of your being. + +This can be tricky if you constantly feel like you're falling behind in your learning. When are you supposed to learn all of the new things happening daily? When are you supposed to catch up on all of that technical debt you've been accruing over the years? When are you going to have time to learn the ins-and-outs of whatever technology that is no longer part of your day-to-day work but is still interesting to you? + +This constant feeling that there's more to do and we need to spend every waking moment doing it or we're somehow less of a developer isn't helped by folks who look super-productive; the folks whom you can suggest something in the morning and they have a working prototype in the afternoon while still figuring out their normal work routine. + +We can acknowledge that we have this feeling; that we feel the constant need to somehow push ourselves to keep learning and doing. We can see ourselves in the moment with the thoughts of "just one more line of code before bed" or "I can read a few more articles or blog posts or [insert favorite way to consume more information here]". We need to see our feelings and understand where they come from. -- 2.31.1