One of the things that helps me avoid burnout while building large systems is something surprisingly small:
Microgoals.
Not “change the entire software industry” goals.
Not “build the next massive platform” goals.
Tiny, visible progress points.
And recently, one of those microgoals hit me while publishing these posts.
Right now, these articles are being written and published on Dev.to.
But one day?
These posts will be running on a KiwiEngine-powered blog.
And honestly, thinking about that keeps me moving.
The Problem With Big Visions
When you’re building something ambitious, it’s very easy to accidentally create a mental mountain that feels impossible to climb.
Especially when your ideas span:
- infrastructure
- runtimes
- deployment systems
- UI architecture
- APIs
- cloud orchestration
- developer tooling
- engines
- platforms
- and long-term ecosystem design
At some point, the scale itself can become mentally exhausting.
Because there’s always:
- another module
- another abstraction
- another system to refine
- another architectural decision to make
And if you only focus on the “final form” of the vision, burnout starts creeping in fast.
I’ve learned that the brain needs visible wins.
Not fake wins.
Real ones.
Small proof points that say:
“The system is becoming real.”
The Power of Tiny Future Milestones
For me, one of those milestones is simple:
One day, these posts won’t just talk about Kiwi Engine.
They’ll run on it.
That matters to me more than I expected.
Because suddenly the vision becomes tangible.
I can picture:
- the blog runtime
- the rendering pipeline
- the editor
- the deployment flow
- the content architecture
- the contracts
- the infrastructure underneath it all
And it turns this giant abstract dream into something concrete.
Not:
“Build an entire ecosystem.”
But:
“Get the blog running.”
That’s psychologically different.
And honestly, I think a lot of developers underestimate how important those small psychological checkpoints are.
Building the Ladder While Climbing It
One of the strange things about building systems from scratch is that you often have to build the tools that eventually build the tools.
That can feel incredibly slow at times.
Especially when modern developer culture constantly pushes:
- speed
- shipping
- instant results
- MVP-at-all-costs
- rapid iteration
- endless optimization
But deep systems work is different.
A lot of the progress is invisible for long stretches.
You spend weeks or months:
- refining architecture
- rethinking boundaries
- redesigning execution flow
- improving portability
- simplifying assumptions
- creating reusable systems
And externally, it can look like “nothing happened.”
But internally?
The foundation is forming.
That’s why these microgoals matter so much.
They create visible manifestations of invisible progress.
Why This Matters Beyond Motivation
This mindset has also changed how I think about sustainability in engineering.
I think a lot of burnout comes from trying to emotionally operate at “final vision scale” every single day.
That’s exhausting.
Especially for builders, founders, architects, and engineers working on long-term systems.
You need smaller landmarks.
Smaller victories.
Smaller “this is becoming real” moments.
Because those moments compound.
The first:
- blog
- deployment
- editor
- dashboard
- module
- runtime
- pipeline
- successful abstraction
Those things matter emotionally.
Not just technically.
The Future Version of This Post
One day:
- the rendering system
- the runtime
- the deployment architecture
- the infrastructure
- the CMS layer
- the contracts
- the pipelines
- and the platform underneath these posts
…will all be powered by the systems I’m currently building.
And honestly?
That’s exciting.
Not because it’s flashy.
But because it represents continuity.
A system eventually becoming mature enough to sustain itself.
I think those kinds of milestones are important.
Especially when building things that may take years to fully realize.
So if you’re building something ambitious yourself:
don’t underestimate the importance of microgoals.
Sometimes the smallest future checkpoint is enough to keep the fire going.
And sometimes:
“That blog will eventually run on my own engine.”
…is more motivating than you’d expect.
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