Chasing My Passion

Ever since I discovered programming, it felt like more than just a skill — it was a passion, something that made me feel alive.
I still remember the first time I wrote a few lines of HTML and saw it come to life in the browser. It wasn’t fancy. But to me, it felt like magic. That simple moment sparked a fire inside me — and I knew that this was what I wanted to do.
From Passion to Purpose
In the beginning, I didn’t think about making money from programming. I just wanted to build stuff. Websites, apps, tools — anything that could solve a problem or just make someone’s life a bit easier.
But as time went on, I realized that if I truly wanted to live with this passion, I had to turn it into something sustainable. Something that could support me. That meant learning not only how to code, but how to create value.
So I started building real projects — not just for fun, but for people

The Struggle Was Real
There were days I doubted myself. Late nights staring at bugs that refused to be fixed. Jobs I didn’t get. Clients who disappeared. Code that broke right before a deadline. It wasn’t always pretty — but it was always mine.
I didn’t come from a tech background. I had to learn everything from scratch. StackOverflow became my second home. I spent weekends learning frameworks, reading docs, and rebuilding things over and over.
What kept me going? The dream of being able to do what I love — and get paid for it.

Making It Work
Eventually, I found ways to monetize what I do:
Freelancing for clients who needed websites and apps
Selling source code
Creating online courses to help others learn
Building products and services powered by what I’ve learned
Each dollar earned through code felt different. It wasn’t just money — it was proof that hard work, persistence, and passion could pay off.
Still Growing, Still Coding
Today, I’m still learning. Still building. Still chasing that feeling I had when I wrote my first <div>
. And now, I’m not just doing it for myself — I’m doing it to help others, to contribute, to build something meaningful.
Because in the end, it’s not just about the code. It’s about the journey.