Tech doesn't create the asymmetry around who gets to be a beginner. It inherits it—from childhood scripts written long before anyone entered the industry.
This post is a response to Not Everyone Gets to Be a Beginner in Tech—one of the most honest pieces I've read in this space in a while. It unlocked something I've been turning over for years: this pattern didn't start in tech.
The article is right. But the root cause is upstream.
Tech doesn't create the asymmetry around who gets to make mistakes, ask questions, and learn in public. It inherits it—from scripts written long before anyone entered the industry.
The Pattern Starts at Home
Parents are the first gatekeepers of permission. Before school, before peers, before industry norms, children learn:
- Who is allowed to make mistakes without punishment
- Whose curiosity is welcomed versus treated as inconvenience
- Who must arrive polished to be safe
- Who gets interpreted with generosity versus suspicion
Those early scripts become the operating system people carry into every domain. Tech just exposes the pattern more brutally—because the industry pretends to be meritocratic while running on unspoken social heuristics.
How Childhood Scripts Become Industry Behavior
| Childhood Script | Adult Tech Experience |
|---|---|
| "Your mistakes are learning." | Allowed to learn in public, forgiven quickly. |
| "Your mistakes are proof you're inadequate." | Judged instantly, must arrive polished. |
| "You're safe even when imperfect." | Can ask questions without fear. |
| "You must not inconvenience others." | Overthink every message, hide until 'good enough.' |
This is why the article is right and why the problem is bigger than tech. These asymmetries don't originate in the industry. The industry inherits them—and because tech is fast-moving, high-visibility, and status-coded, the inherited asymmetries become sharper.
Why Tech Makes the Pattern More Visible
Tech culture rewards:
- Public learning (but only for certain bodies, accents, backgrounds)
- Confidence displays (even when unearned)
- "Potential" narratives (distributed unevenly)
- Mistake tolerance (granted selectively)
So the industry ends up reenacting childhood dynamics at scale. Some people get infinite retries. Others get one mistake interpreted as a verdict.
This is exactly what the original article calls out. But the root cause is upstream.
"Beginner" Is a Social Position, Not a Skill Level
Being a beginner isn't about knowledge. It's about how others interpret your ignorance.
And that interpretation is shaped by gender, race, accent, class, age, neurotype, body language, cultural background, perceived "fit"—and yes, the scripts learned from the first people who ever watched you try something and fail.
Some people are never allowed to be beginners because they were never allowed to be children.
This Isn't Just a Tech Problem
This applies to medicine, law, academia, finance, trades—every domain where learning in public carries social risk. Tech is just the current high-visibility arena where the pattern is easiest to name.
What the original article calls a "beginner problem" is really:
- A psychological safety problem
- Rooted in early socialization
- Reinforced by industry norms
- Masked by meritocracy mythology
A Question Worth Sitting With
If the real issue is that some people were never granted the psychological safety to be beginners in childhood—what would an industry look like if it intentionally restored those conditions?
Not in a paternalistic way. But by recognizing that good onboarding isn't just about tools and processes. It's about rewriting, for some people, the first story they were ever told about what happens when they don't know something.
Industries don't just need better onboarding. They need better origin stories.
What scripts did your earliest teachers install—and how long did it take you to notice them?
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