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by ihgann 1346 days ago
I've always thought I just got really, really lucky that my favorite activity/hobby in the world ended up paying well. And I am - I'm incredibly fortunate that that's a reality.

I had no idea when I was 12 years old writing silly video games (shoutout to [BYOND](https://www.byond.com), something I'm near-certain nobody on Hacker News has ever come across), that it was a venture that made money, let alone that it would culminate in a very fruitful and happy career (that I'm still very much early into). I oftentimes feel that I still get to just do what I love, and somebody is willing to pay me well for that.

But most of the side projects I want to work on don't align with my company, or its vision. So I still make them. I hack away at small projects that are over-engineered because it's fun, or really only target a usecase I have. They aren't production-quality changes, but they work for me, and I enjoy working on them.

When I entered the world of Silicon Valley, I realized how naive I was thta many people enter this career because it is well-paying, despite if they actually enjoy the process.

Not to get too sentimental here, but code is still magic to me. I'm just amazed that all of this works. To a small degree it bothers me that others just see this craft as an ends to a means (but then I remember that they aren't really hurting me, or this field, so it's OK, and I move on).