For the past five years, I’ve been heads-down, building things, solving problems, and steadily sharpening my skills. But more recently, I’ve been thinking about the visibility and how sharing what I’m learning can be just as valuable as the learning itself.
So I’m trying something new: learning in public.
Not to teach, not to perform, just to document the process, reflect on my growth, and connect with others who are doing the same.
Why now?
I’ve spent a lot of time wondering if something is “worth posting,” waiting until it’s polished or complete. But learning doesn’t always look clean.
This idea really clicked after I read Swyx’s "Learn in Public". I’d seen the phrase before, but that article made it feel real, actionable.
What stuck with me most was the mindset: it’s not about being right, it’s about being real. Showing your work. Leaving breadcrumbs for your future self (and maybe helping someone else along the way).
So this is me, leaning into that.
Why I’m doing this?
1. Writing brings clarity
Explaining something forces me to understand it better. Even quick notes help me process what I’ve learned and spot the gaps. Writing is thinking and publishing is a bonus layer of accountability.
2. It makes me easier to find
Sharing my thoughts and projects helps people get a clearer sense of who I am, how I think, what I’m working on, and what I care about.
3. It opens the door to better conversations
Sometimes I solve a problem someone else is facing. Sometimes someone shows me a better way. Those exchanges only happen when I show up and share. The internet rewards curiosity, not perfection.
Don’t worry about being wrong. Try your best, and let the internet correct you. — Swyx
What you can expect
I’ll be posting notes, reflections, small wins, dead ends, and probably a few half-baked ideas too. It won’t always be polished, but it’ll be honest.
No strict schedule. No pressure. Just building a visible trail of what I’m learning, so future me and maybe a few others can benefit.