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Brian Oiko
Brian Oiko

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From Confused to Confident: My Outreachy Contribution Experience

My Outreachy Contribution Journey 🚀

When I first applied to Outreachy, I didn’t fully know what to expect. I had heard it was a great opportunity to contribute to open source, but I wasn’t sure if I was “ready.” Looking back now, I realize something important: you don’t need to be fully ready — you just need to start.

🌱 Getting Started

At the beginning, everything felt overwhelming.

New codebase.
New tools.
New people.

I had to:

  • Learn how to navigate a large project
  • Understand contribution guidelines
  • Communicate in a professional open-source environment

At first, even setting things up and making my first contribution felt like a big challenge. But step by step, things started making sense.

đź’ˇ What I Learned

  1. How to read and understand real-world code

Before Outreachy, most of my coding experience was from small projects or tutorials. This was different.

I learned how to:

  • Break down large codebases into smaller parts
  • Trace how features are implemented
  • Understand other people’s code (which is a huge skill)

  1. Version control and collaboration (Git & GitHub)

I improved a lot in:

  • Creating clean commits
  • Writing meaningful commit messages
  • Handling pull requests and feedback

I also learned that code review is not criticism — it’s collaboration.


  1. Asking better questions

At first, I was afraid to ask questions.

But I realized:

  • Asking clearly saves time
  • Good questions show effort, not weakness

Now I try to:

  • Explain what I tried
  • Share errors or logs
  • Be specific

  1. Communication in open source

Working in a global community taught me how to:

  • Communicate clearly and respectfully
  • Be patient when waiting for responses
  • Stay professional in discussions

⚠️ Challenges I Faced

  1. Feeling stuck

There were times I didn’t know what to do next.

Instead of giving up, I learned to:

  • Break problems into smaller steps
  • Search for similar issues
  • Ask for guidance when necessary

  1. Imposter syndrome

I often felt like:

«“Maybe I’m not good enough for this.”»

But I kept going anyway.

And that’s what matters.


  1. Debugging issues

Fixing bugs wasn’t easy.

Sometimes:

  • Errors didn’t make sense
  • Fixes didn’t work immediately

But this improved my problem-solving skills a lot.


🤝 The Human Side of Open Source

One of the best parts of this journey was interacting with mentors and contributors.

I learned that:

  • People are willing to help if you show effort
  • Feedback is meant to help you grow
  • Open source is more about collaboration than competition

🚀 Where I Am Now

I may still be learning, but I’m not the same person I was at the beginning.

Now I:

  • Approach problems with more confidence
  • Understand how real projects work
  • Feel more comfortable contributing to open source

🔥 Final Thoughts

Outreachy isn’t just about getting selected.

It’s about:

  • Growth
  • Consistency
  • Stepping out of your comfort zone

No matter the outcome, this journey has already made me better.

And I’m just getting started.


📌 To Anyone Thinking of Applying

Start.

You don’t need to know everything.
You just need to be willing to learn.


🙌 Let’s Connect

If you're also on this journey or interested in open source, feel free to connect with me. Let’s learn and grow together.
Grateful for the opportunity to learn and grow through @Outreachy 🙌

Outreachy #OpenSource #TechJourney #LearningInPublic

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