by tomstokes on 10/16/17, 10:44 PM with 7 comments
by harpocrates on 10/17/17, 7:43 AM
This article hits the nail on the head: being slightly paranoid and doubting oneself is a pretty essential part of being a good developer. It's (in most cases) pretty normal. The key is to try and detach your self-worth from the problems you face. You aren't any less good because you couldn't solve that bug last week.
by convolvatron on 10/17/17, 4:39 AM
we were all petrified, felt totally under qualified and did as much as we could do to fill the perceived skill gap.
i think without an exception we excelled. the courses were harder, graded better, got better student feedback, covered a lot more material and engendered a reciprocal student response that the distracted and jaded profs never got.
a little performance pressure isn't always a bad thing
by TheMissingPiece on 10/16/17, 10:51 PM
This did resonate, though (reminds me of the buzz words in mental health that gain popularity every year or so)
>it minimizes the impact that this experience has on people that really do suffer from it
by true_tuna on 10/17/17, 1:21 PM
by imposterer on 10/17/17, 4:15 PM