[Photo by Elijah Hiett on Unsplash]
A convert!
Yea, you heard right. I haven’t always been on this path. For the most part of my life, I have had other people or random circumstances make decisions for me as regards certain milestones - the schools to attend, the course to study etc…
During my one-year compulsory service (NYSC), it dawned on me that I don’t want to practice what I just spent four years studying. I needed something challenging. I want to be a problem solver not just getting a job done. What I had spent four years studying in the university somehow did not seem to fit. I dread the routine, so I had to make a decision, and I did - I wasn’t going to pursue practising Quantity Survey.
NYSC was over, and I was back to my parents' house. Suddenly I was faced with the reality of my decision - what am I going to do next with my life? Should I go into business, should I further my education? Months kept rolling by, and my mind couldn’t seem to reach an agreement. I had ideas, except they were tech ideas. I didn’t know how to code, so I couldn’t bring my ideas to life and I didn’t have the money to pay someone to do it for me.
[Photo by Clark Tibbs on Unsplash]
I tried learning to code - HTML, then CSS - then I got to JavaScript, and the tutorials started to bore me. The beginnings are always boring:
Open the console in your browser, type 1 + 1 and press enter
alert(‘I am here’)
prompt(‘Enter your name here’)
Console.log(‘I can do this’)
I was like wtf… I want something tough… what’s all this? Don’t I know 1 + 1 will equal 2? So I quit. I couldn’t relate how the little things come together to help create the big things. Then the months started rolling by again - my ideas still burning in my heart. I was restless.
At this point, I started getting pressured to further my education. Somehow I began to dread the idea of going back to school, to study more quantity surveying. My parents wanted me to. So I took the form and waited for the admission list.
While waiting, (i.e. about 2 month’s after I quit learning to program) I summoned a little courage to try again, so, I went online to read about different programming languages to see which could really help me to build what I want, and python caught my attention, so I decided I was going to try python.
Then I was back to that same boring beginning:
Open the python interpreter, type 3 + 5
print ’this is a string’
str = ‘I am a variable’
print str
Will this get any better? I decided to be a bit patient.
[Photo by Diego PH on Unsplash]
Then the loops came and I faced my first challenge - write a code to generate prime numbers ...
, and I couldn’t do it. Finally, something I couldn’t do. That was the beginning of my love for programming.
I decided I was going to get apply to Andela (a software development company that trains talents and outsource them to companies). I was inexperienced and was considering going through a rigorous, technical hiring process.
The admission list for masters came out and I had to convince my parents that I was not going back to school (It wasn’t easy). After different discussion, they eventually allowed me to ‘have my way’. I felt I had one chance, so I put in everything for me to get this job and after all the effort (about 4 different stages), I wasn’t hired. I was devastated.
My parents encouraged me to quickly go and accept the admission I was offered before I lose it, but I told them I wanted to try again. I did my best to convince them and eventually, they accepted. So I put in my best the second time and this time I got hired.
It’s been about a year and 2 months now since I decided to try programming again, now I’m working and growing in my technical skills, and someday soon, I’ll build my product.
So who am I?
I am Victor Ayodele and I am a tech convert.
You can pursue your dreams too!
Hi! Welcome @ayodelevm . Congratulations that now you are part of one of the best website in www.
Thanks @cryptoflash, looking forward to a wonderful experience on this platform...
Welcome to steemit - well done on knowing your mind and sticking with it! Kate
Thanks @kate-m
Welcome to Steemit!
Your contributions will be valued
@thescholarlyowl
Thanks @thescholarlyowl
Hey! Python is good fun :) Programming was kinda boring for me at first, as well. I found a love for it by using Autodesk Maya, an animation program free for students. You can see instant results from what you program when using python. Building castles and randomly generating grass fields was the most fun for me!
Glad to know I was not alone @theartlaw... Lolzzz...
Hey Victor - awesome and well formatted intro - love it :) Only thing I miss is a picture of you - but hey, you don't need to have one if you don't want to!
Check out @utopian-io, as a developer you must know that page!
Resteemed you via @welcoming, my page for showcasing promising newcomers like you! Greets!
Thanks @theaustrianguy, your response is very informative, and I do appreciate the information, I'm checking out @utopian-io now. Thanks for the resteem too...
P.S. I have added a picture of me...
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