For the longest time, I’ve always wanted to learn how to code. I never had the time nor the funds. When I got furloughed at the peak of the pandemi...
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This is pretty concise info, great post! I partook in a boot camp for about six months myself while working a FT job. I understood only after why not having one (a job) is the ideal scenario. Depending on your learning style, organizational skills, and familiarity with code it can be extremely overwhelming to keep pace while simultaneously attempting to process or learn the information. It's a firehose like flow of info in a relatively short amount of time.
If you want to succeed and or get the most from your Boot Camp experience as Yani said Networking is really helpful! You may also need to tell your friends and family that they should expect you to withdraw from otherwise normal levels of engagement and respect your need for isolation as you embark on this arduous journey but not to take it personal.
While I wasn't able to get the results I wanted due to getting behind on the curriculum, I still emerged out the other side of my experience with a sense of success. I realized I had learned more than was originally aware of (I was green going in). I felt burned out initially and needed a break once it was over. But once I returned to coding, I had a better sense of what I was doing and the chaos that had just ensued had assimilated fairly well within me.
As Yani said, Consistency is everything, muscle memory is your best weapon in your fight to reach your goals...
Here, here @ratherun1que! Well said! What really matters is you still triumphed at the end. Your resilience and perserverance is admirable. The most moving and inspirational take away from the whole experience is seeing my fellow cohort mates come out the other side no matter what personal struggles they were facing.