I grew up surrounded by stories, poetry —reading them, writing them, losing myself in the texture of language. But one summer after matriculation, a friend dragged me to a computer camp. That’s where it happened. I fell in love—with logic, with the quiet beauty of code, with the strange satisfaction of making something work.
I spent days obsessing over how to solve a problem, tracing the logic in my head until it clicked. At the time, I wasn’t thinking of a career. I just loved the process.
After completing my Bachelor’s in Engineering, I found myself exploring job opportunities and somehow drifted back into programming. I picked up Ruby on Rails, dabbled in Flutter, and kept following the thread of curiosity that first pulled me in.
Now, I chase problems because I enjoy untangling them. There’s something deeply rewarding about finding the bug no one else sees and making things whole again. That quiet, focused joy I found years ago in a dusty computer lab? Still here.