Beginnings Fueled by Curiosity and Code
My story started with C# and Angular, back when I was still trying to figure out where I fit in the tech world.
Then I discovered Golang, and everything changed.
Go opened a new door — not just to a new way of writing code, but to a new way of thinking about building.
It wasn’t just programming anymore; it was creating.
At first, I built small personal projects, experiments that existed for the joy of learning.
But when I started building tools that others could actually use — and maybe even pay for — I stumbled into the indie hacker world without realizing it.
Realizing What “Indie Hacker” Meant
At some point, I learned the term Indie Hacker.
An Indie Hacker, I discovered, is someone who builds software products independently — often without investors, without a team, without the safety net of a big company.
They’re self-driven creators who share their journey openly, build in public, and make a living (or try to) from their creations.
And when I looked at what I was doing — developing web APIs, network applications, and sharing my progress with the Build in Public community — I saw myself in that description.
I wasn’t backed by anyone.
I was just a solo builder chasing ideas that mattered to me, one project at a time.
And that’s when it clicked — I was already an indie hacker.
Learning by Building
The road hasn’t been easy.
There’s no manager telling you what to do next, no investor handing you money, no HR team cushioning your mistakes.
It’s just you — learning, iterating, and staying curious.
I taught myself Golang, learned how to market my products, and built my personal brand one small post at a time on platforms like Threads and within the Build in Public community.
But being an indie hacker isn’t just about building software.
It’s about building connection — sharing what you know, learning from others, and growing together.
Each conversation, each feedback thread, each message from someone who found value in my product reminded me:
I wasn’t just coding — I was building something human.
Building Toward a Dream — My Indie Tech Company
Even though I started this journey solo, my long-term dream is to build a self-sustaining indie tech company — one that’s small, creative, and independent.
No venture capital.
No “growth at all costs.”
Just meaningful software that helps people and can stand on its own.
In my vision, this company would be a space where creativity and quality matter more than quarterly profits.
To get there, I’ve had to learn everything from scratch — not just coding, but project management, marketing, and even a bit of finance.
Being an indie hacker means wearing every hat: developer, designer, marketer, founder.
It’s exhausting sometimes.
But it’s also liberating.
Because when you build your own ecosystem — one where your product connects to your community — it becomes something alive.
Building with the Indie Hacker Spirit
What makes me proud of being on this path isn’t the products themselves — it’s the independence behind them.
Every app, every API, every feature is a story of persistence and belief.
By starting small, solving one problem at a time, and trusting my instincts, I’ve learned that creativity thrives within constraints.
Being an indie hacker isn’t just about technology.
It’s about purpose — understanding the value you bring to others and finding meaning in that process.
A Journey That Keeps Evolving
My path is still long, and I know there are countless challenges ahead.
But this journey has shaped me — both technically and personally.
It’s taught me how to be patient, how to think deeply about what I build, and how to connect my dreams with real-world impact.
When I began, I didn’t know I was an indie hacker.
Now, I can’t imagine being anything else.
This path may be uncertain, but it’s mine — and I’ll keep walking it with passion, curiosity, and the quiet determination to build something that lasts.
To me, it was simple — I just wanted to build things.
Little products, bits of software that I was passionate about, and tools I thought could help people.
But as time passed and I looked back at the path I’d taken, I realized something quietly profound:
I had already been living the indie hacker life all along — I just didn’t have a name for it yet.
NOTES
- Article posted in 2024 and reposted
- AI-powered translation
-
Read the original Vietnamese version here: https://hqn.vn/blog/toi-khong-biet-minh-la-mot-indie-hacker
More About Me
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Open Source: github.com/kitmodule
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