I got into coding because I was curious about how phones work. I remember that day clearly. I was at the bus stop on Rampart with my mom, and I was on her phone, watching YouTube. I searched “how to make a game”. It was like a 6-minute video explaining the steps to make games, and I would watch it religiously, telling my mom, “I need a lot of money, a computer, and I need to market. She would just listen to me yap about for hours on end. Literally once a month, I would remember I wanted to make games and tell her because I was passionate about it.
My coding introduction started in 7th grade in science class. We used an app/ website called Scratch. It’s a trash coding website, and I didn’t know what I was really doing on there, but I remember my old friend Caleb recorded his laugh on the app and got it to play. He sounded like SpongeBob, it was funny. In 8th grade, it was about the same, but it wasn't fun because nothing was explained at all, so I was very confused. In 8th grade, I also got a desktop, so I felt like I could finally start coding and do what I really wanted to do. I used to watch this YouTuber called Dani YouTube, and he made his games on Unity, so I downloaded Unity. I didn’t have a clue what I was doing, but I managed to download a bunch of assets for characters. I specifically remember placing a tank down, but being completely confused about what I was looking at because they had a lot of words on there that I couldn’t even fathom.
I have about 5 years of coding experience, starting from my freshman year till now. I started learning code from my teacher, Mr. Whitehead, and we used a site called Code. It was AP computer science. I struggled, but I failed the exam. I saw Mr. Greg at the pathway thing we had, and I was interested in Operation Spark. One of the teachers told me I should do it, but the paper she gave me, I missed the deadline was already over, but I got scared and wussed out. My sophomore year, I did AP computer science and failed the exam again, then I signed myself up for Operation Spark, and I passed the class easily with no sweat, besides HTML and CSS. I attempted to do Operation Spark again, but that was level 1, so I had to go back to being a normal student. Until my principal saw me one day and said, “Malik, you're smart, why don’t you join the robotics team?”, I said, “sure” because there wasn't anything else to do. In robotics, we use Java to code the robot, but I didn’t know Java. Since I’m the only one on the team who knew how to code, I was appointed coding team captain, and I tell you, I was stressed. I had to interpret a language I didn’t understand with a language I wasn’t fully literate in. One of the biggest skills I learned in my two years of robotics is stress management and teamwork.
My biggest struggles when it comes to coding don’t even stem from coding; they come from injuries I sustained. While I was trying to complete level 2 for the first time, I was suffering the effects of a concussion I received. It damaged my brain to the point that I would forget what I just learned 1 minute after. My second attempt, I got concussed for a third time, so I failed yet again because my brain was so messed up to the point I started losing hope in my dreams. Then, while I was waiting to get my exam result, I got hit by a car, and still to this day, I have a hole in my knee. My third attempt, I also failed again, but I steeled my resolve to pass level 2, and on my fourth attempt, I did it just barely. I also started to feel cursed because every time I started Spark, something always happened to me without fail.
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