About Me
Bio
I build things for the web that actually work the way they should. I care about clean code, smooth UX, and making the internet a little less annoying. When I'm not chasing perfection in my code, I'm chasing speed—in the form of fast cars.
Goals in This Program
- Master semantic HTML and accessibility best practices to create inclusive web experiences
- Build responsive, mobile-first applications that work seamlessly across all devices
- Develop strong JavaScript skills for interactive and dynamic web applications
- Learn modern frontend frameworks and tools to build scalable applications
- Collaborate with other developers and contribute to real-world projects
- Build a portfolio of projects that showcase my growth and capabilities
Areas of Low Confidence
- Complex CSS animations and transitions for smooth user experiences
- Performance optimization and understanding how to debug performance issues
Note to Future Self
You've come a long way from debugging console errors at 2 a.m. with zero idea what went wrong. Don't forget that. Every hour you spent chasing perfection in your code, every project you scrapped and rebuilt from scratch, every moment you doubted if you were actually getting anywhere—it all stacked up. By now, you should be sharper, calmer, and building things that past you could barely imagine. But don't let the comfort of “knowing” stuff kill that restless curiosity. Keep breaking things. Keep learning the hard way. Keep staying pissed off at lazy design and broken UX. That edge is what got you here.
Extra Thoughts
People love to say “time is money,” but it's really not. You can lose money and get it back. Time? Once it’s gone, it's gone. And the worst part? Most people trade their best hours for things they don't even care about—approval, comfort, clout. Then they call it “stability.” If you're going to spend your time, at least waste it on something that makes you feel alive. Even failure feels better when it's your own.