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Richard Pascoe
Richard Pascoe

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Starting Without a Perfect Plan

On the last day of each month, I take a moment to pause and reflect. This post kicks off a monthly series where I look back at what went well, what didn't, and what I've learned along the way.

When I joined DEV at the start of January, I first introduced myself in the Welcome Thread and followed it up with the traditional Hello World! post. That post got nearly forty views but little traction - which was to be expected.

The next day, I published the first post in the Learning with freeCodeCamp series, documenting my journey through their Responsive Web Design certification.

This was my primary reason for joining the DEV Community: to write about my learning journey and keep myself consistent. In retrospect, it wasn't a perfect plan - it required almost daily posting - but it's worked out well regardless.

As the month progressed and I became more active in the weekly Welcome Thread and other discussions, my exposure increased. Posting about learning resources - such as Free Python Resources - helped too.

With my confidence slowly growing, I took some of my orphaned posts and turned them into series, feeling they deserved more than just a one-off.

At this point, I had earned a couple of badges and had also become a Trusted Member within the community. I was completely humbled by this, and it motivated me to redouble my efforts in staying involved.

Sharing discussion-based posts - like The Internet's Addiction to Being Contrary - sparked thoughtful conversation and felt really encouraging.

Completing my first certification project from freeCodeCamp was the perfect cap to the month.

Looking back on January, I'm proud of the progress I've made and the connections I've started. Growth takes time, but showing up consistently pays off. I can't wait to see what February brings.

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Top comments (9)

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pascal_cescato_692b7a8a20 profile image
Pascal CESCATO

Great progress!

I can't wait to see what February brings.

Unfortunately, as usual, there are 28 days this month… What a chance that we are in 2026 and not 2024 or 2028!

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Richard Pascoe

Must admit that made me smile, Pascal. Well done, Sir!

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rkeeves profile image
rkeeves

Yes! This is the most important thing!
Programming is a job.
Despite the annoying MS Teams meetings, SCRUM anti-engineering, bugs, and complete mayhem...
You wake up each day, go in, do your work, then you spend your salary on more important stuff like: family, putting kid through college, paying for dentist, buying food :)

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bhavin-allinonetools profile image
Bhavin Sheth

Love this reflection. Showing up consistently, even without a “perfect plan,” is exactly how real progress happens — your journey feels honest, relatable, and motivating.

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khadijah profile image
Khadijah (Dana Ordalina)

nice

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Richard Pascoe

Appreciate the feedback, Bhavin - as always. Makes staying motivated so much easier!

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paras594 profile image
Paras 🧙‍♂️

Nicee!! 👏👏👏

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Richard Pascoe

Cheers, Paras - means alot! I'm hoping that these monthly retrospectives will further help me stay consistent!

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Khadijah (Dana Ordalina)

nice post