The happiest I've ever been

(ben-mini.com)

317 points | by bewal416 2 days ago

29 comments

  • bengale 5 hours ago
    In the nicest possible way, this is basically the oldest lesson there is.

    You weren’t happy because you optimized your feelings or had the right opinions. You were happy because you stopped focusing on yourself and became responsible for other people. Six kids needed you, in the real world, every week. That kind of outward focus kills emptiness fast.

    Chasing happiness, moral righteousness, or political engagement just loops you back into your own head, helping people doesn’t. Feeling good is a side-effect of being useful, not the goal.

    • nvarsj 4 hours ago
      There’s an entire generation of mostly childless adults who are shocked to find they enjoy contributing to others’ happiness. I have friends like this, their only purpose in life is to have no responsibilities, FIRE, and never give to anyone but themselves. Seems like a terribly depressing way to live but pretty common in tech/upper middle class circles.
      • Aurornis 2 hours ago
        > but pretty common in tech/upper middle class circles.

        It's common in some tech and upper middle class bubbles, but outside of some startups and a few VHCOL cities most of the 40+ people in tech I encounter have families.

        I think the mindset is most popular in internet bubbles like Reddit. Reddit went mainstream a decade ago and many people in their 30s and 40s grew up reading a lot of Reddit. Reddit cleaned up their popular subreddits list years ago, but for a while subreddits like r/childfree were constantly in everyone's default feeds. Redditors would talk about people who had kids as "breeders" as a derogatory term and treat them like they'd made terrible decisions with their lives.

        I didn't realize how much this carried over into the real world until my friends and I started having kids. I knew a few people who treated our decisions like we were making terrible mistakes and throwing our lives away. I still encounter people from younger generations who are confused when I say that I like spending time with my kids. They can't imagine how that would be enjoyable in any way. When you grow up with your chosen social media telling you that the smart people are maximizing their bank accounts, minimizing their responsibilities, and doing as little as possible to get there, they can't fathom how someone could be happy with kids.

        • sublinear 31 minutes ago
          I am about to hit 40 soon and have an alternative take on all that. I agree reddit was and still is a very toxic echo chamber, but the rest of us who have avoided having kids shouldn't be lumped in with those people.

          I came from a big family and grew up somewhat poor watching remorseful adults who didn't recognize the gravity of bringing a life into this world, let alone several, basically drink themselves to death to cope.

          My social life is mostly offline and I enjoy helping people in any way I can, but I am fully aware of my own flaws. I find balance by being generous in what seems like a million other ways I might not have the energy or time for if I had a family. To each their own.

      • whaleidk 4 hours ago
        People who want to be childless usually champion the importance of building strong community through friends and neighbors, just because they don’t want kids doesn’t mean they don’t want to contribute to others’ happiness lol. People wanting FIRE is a lot more to do with the current economy and wealth of useless or harmful jobs than kids
        • Aurornis 2 hours ago
          > People who want to be childless usually champion the importance of building strong community through friends and neighbors,

          This describes all of the childless people age 50 and older than I know.

          It does not describe the social media r/childfree mindset people I know at all. They have their bubble of friends they keep in touch with only when they feel like it but that's about it.

          There's a big difference between childless and r/childfree style people, though.

          > People wanting FIRE is a lot more to do with the current economy and wealth of useless or harmful jobs than kids

          FIRE rose to popularity before this economy, though. It felt like peak FIRE was during ZIRP when it was easy to get a high paying tech job even if you barely had the skills for it. All the blogs and influencers made it sound so easy to just keep that going straight into early retirement as long as you continued living an austere lifestyle, which came with implied advice to avoid having kids.

          I followed several of the FIRE blogs and forums in the early days but had to stop reading after they started filling up with people convinced they could retire at age 36 with $1.2 million in the bank because they they lived frugally last year and decided they could keep coasting that way for another 50 years without their lifestyle changing. I remember reading a few disaster stories from people who thought they were doing leanFIRE with their spouse until their spouse grew up and realized they actually wanted kids and to be married to someone who had a little more ambition in life. I know these stories aren't what FIRE is supposed to be about in the theoretical optimal sense, but there were so many stories like this that the forums just felt like a sad place to be.

        • roenxi 1 hour ago
          I think more than FIRE people should just focus on FI. You still have to do something with your day after becoming financially independent and a job is still one of many good ways to contribute to the community even if you don't technically need one. So retiring is an option but not the only one.

          On the other hand it remains quite confusing that after centuries of capital achieving vastly better results than labour people still keep going for labouring as their primary strategy. Building up a strong income-generating capital base is just common sense and it is an extremely good idea to have enough that you could technically avoid working if it made sense.

        • arealaccount 3 hours ago
          > dont want to deal with kids

          Someone has to bring up the next generation, the no kids crowd want all the luxury of having the next generation without putting in the effort or spending the money.

      • bengale 4 hours ago
        Yeah, and I do get it to some extent. Everything about having a child seems burdensome and hard. Turns out it's doesn't feel anything like that and I can't think of anything I'd rather be doing. I wouldn't swap with another person on this planet.
        • cheema33 4 hours ago
          > Everything about having a child seems burdensome and hard. Turns out it's doesn't feel anything like that and I can't think of anything I'd rather be doing.

          You got lucky and had kid(s) that were not extremely difficult to raise. Not everybody gets that. Not all kids are alike. Some will make your life a living hell. It is a total crapshoot.

          Also, not everybody enjoys parenting, even if they have easy kids. We are not all built the same.

          I did get lucky and had relatively easy kids. I love them. But, I do not enjoy parenting.

        • nlavezzo 4 hours ago
          100%. I never was excited about having a kid but it's totally amazing to be helping a little human that you love to figure out the world and grow into a good person.

          People can obviously make the opposite choice, but I'd encourage anyone that's never been around good little kids as an adult, to find a way to be around them in a helpful or fun role for a while. Volunteer at a youth group, sports camp, coding class, whatever. Or just be an "uncle" to some of your friends' kids. My volunteering at a church youth group in my early 20's probably gave me the nudge I needed.

        • jebarker 2 hours ago
          > Everything about having a child seems burdensome and hard.

          I love my kids and they're pretty great (and seem easy by comparison to others), but it's definitely burdensome and hard.

        • Cook4986 1 hour ago
          Existence is suffering. But there are moments that make it worthwhile. When you have a kid, you not only get more of those moments, but you give those moments to people in the future.
      • paulryanrogers 1 hour ago
        No one chooses to be born. Once they are, they may find that procreation is impossible for them or just not something they'll do well or even want. None of these is necessarily depressing.

        We have no shortage of humans, so there's no need to try to shame the childless. Nor those who focus on themselves.

      • satvikpendem 2 hours ago
        I want to do that some of the time, not all the time, that's the difference.
      • anal_reactor 2 hours ago
        The problem though is that relationships with others are risky. When I look at my social circle about half of my friends express some kind of regret related to their marriages. Call me an entitled prick, but I honestly believe that 90% of people are liquid crap. I realized that in order to have a good social life I need to filter very hard who I hang out with. Even if I could reproduce by budding, this is not an environment I want my kids to grow up in. "Dad, why did you make me into a world full of normies?"
        • Aurornis 1 hour ago
          > When I look at my social circle about half of my friends express some kind of regret related to their marriages. Call me an entitled prick, but I honestly believe that 90% of people are liquid crap. I realized that in order to have a good social life I need to filter very hard who I hang out with.

          Candidly, if half of your friends are in regretful marriages and 90% of the people you encounter are "crap" then I would be questioning your social filtering.

          • throwaway290 9 minutes ago
            From experience I think 90% of people are really liquid crap. filtering can get it down to 50% or less but it also means you are WAY more lonely
        • popalchemist 38 minutes ago
          The world is always full of danger. This moment in time is exceptional only in the form of that danger, not in its substance.

          When those of us with noble traits -- intelligence, empathy, morality and so on -- refuse to reproduce, we do so at the cost of allowing the OTHERS who lack those traits to make up a larger and larger percentage of the population. They WILL reproduce.

          Food for thought.

      • RGamma 3 hours ago
        Childlessness seems to be an increasingly compassionate choice. Degrowth by force.
      • dec0dedab0de 2 hours ago
        what does “FIRE” mean in this context? I can’t figure it out
        • kashunstva 1 hour ago
          Financial Independence, Retire Early
      • idiotsecant 3 hours ago
        It's always funny how many people think that the only font of altruism is taking care of children who have your DNA, like that's some kind of selfless act. It is, in fact, the ultimate vanity of which humans are capable. Raising little variations of yourself might make you feel good, but if you think it's a unique path to a fulfilling life I suggest you are the one in the little bubble.
        • jebarker 2 hours ago
          > It's always funny how many people think that the only font of altruism is taking care of children who have your DNA, like that's some kind of selfless act

          This is a strawman position in my opinion. I don't think there's that many people who think they're carrying out some selfless act by having children. It's simply biologically true that the children you'll probably have the easiest time raising are your own and, assuming we want to continue as a species, we do need people to have children. It's fine to have them, fine to not, neither side has some moral high ground.

        • XorNot 2 hours ago
          I think what usually gets mixed up is how the responsibility works, and biological children sit at the overlap.

          The thing I most crucially remember about my son being born is that it felt downright easy to simply dive into all the things I would now be doing: because there was no one else. I either got it done or it didn't get done.

          Someone else's kids on the other hand there is a choice: their parents.

          It's not absolute IMO but you also see it echoed by working too: when it's your job, it's a lot easier to simply go "right I need to handle this" then when it's not.

        • Aeolun 1 hour ago
          It’s uh, historically proven, so to say.
    • perrygeo 3 hours ago
      The entire zeitgeist of software technology revolves around the assumption that making things efficient, easy, and quick is inherently good. Most people who are "sitting in front of rectangles, moving tiny rectangles" have sometime grandiose notions of their works' importance; we're making X work better for the good of Y to enable Z. Abstract shit like that.

      No man, you're just making X easier. If the world needs more X, fine. If not, woops.

      The detachment from reality makes it all too easy to deceive yourself into thinking "hey this actually helps people".

      • Swizec 3 hours ago
        > Most people who are "sitting in front of rectangles, moving tiny rectangles"

        Hey dude these are my emotional support rectangles!

        Truth is, anything can be meaningful. We make our own meaning and almost anything will do as long as you believe in it. If optimizing rectangles on the screen makes you happy, that’s great. If it doesn’t, find something else to do.

        • temp8830 2 hours ago
          Yup, because there are plenty of opportunities to get tokens to feed your family outside of moving those rectangles. Not.
    • et-al 4 hours ago
      Also, I think for a good number of people, their first job out of college is oftentimes one they will look fondly back on because they've just finished ~17 years of school, have financial independence with a salary, and are still bright-eyed about all the possibilities.
    • jraby3 4 hours ago
      Similar for me. Happiest I've ever been was when I was an assistant guide for birthright Israel.

      My job was to make sure the 40 kids that came were having a good time. When your job is to make others happy, you become happy.

    • steeleyespan 1 hour ago
      I’ve spent too much time talking to Claude, because this sounds exactly like one of its messages
      • bengale 1 hour ago
        Absolutely! That’s a great point.

        For real though, I’m not wasting tokens on comments. I do wonder if we will pick up habits when interacting with them a lot though.

    • popalchemist 1 hour ago
      Even if it's the oldest lesson, it's one we all need to learn, sometimes multiple times. Yesterday was the best time to have learned it. 2nd best is always today.

      There is never a bad time to learn this lesson.

      • pickledish 1 hour ago
        Agreed! I'm not sure why the GP comment has a somewhat negative attitude about it, I think it's great for people to realize this and talk about it, every year a whole new year's worth of young adults turn up not knowing it! Insert XKCD lucky 10,000 comic here
        • bengale 15 minutes ago
          Not meant to be negative.
  • dejawu 3 minutes ago
    [delayed]
  • lr4444lr 28 minutes ago
    As someone who taught kids in person and fell into a deep depression with how Kafkaesque that job was and then found so much more gratification as a SWE, all I can say is, the author's experience is not universal. (And I am a parent, so it's not about disliking kids.) I will say though that remote work is definitely dystopia. I need an office and the presence of people physically.
  • arjie 5 hours ago
    Huh, strange. I remember when I was a little 9 year old boy typing in:

        FD 40
        RT 90
        FD 40
        RT 90
        FD 40
        RT 90
        FD 40
        RT 90
    
    To get a square on the screen. And then I was slightly older boy destroying my dad's precious slides for his presentation by formatting the entire disk accidentally while installing Red Hat Linux 8 Psyche from CDs my dad got at the bazaar. I was so excited for Shrike to come out the next year.

    Then I was slightly older and discovered that 'programs' are just text you use a 'compiler' on and not a special thing you made in Borland's Turbo C.

    Then I was older and started using vim. Then older still and made HTML pages with this new thing called DHTML on Geocities. Then ActivePerl. Then a VPS. Then Wordpress. Then discovered Prolog, Eclipse for Java, Mex for C++ in Matlab, and git. Then some years later github. Then interned in SF and discovered CI/CD, Hadoop et al. and how servers look in a DC in SOMA. Then IntelliJ. Then a trading engine. And then GPT was announced. And TalkToTransformer showed the future. And then people were demoing these ugly To-Do lists it could make. And suddenly we're here today.

    Every stage of software has been incredible. I don't have to `movq`. I don't have to `jstack`. If I want a TUI, the tools can construct one to my specifications in moments. It's sheer magic, man. It's a scary time (I've had a couple of what-if nightmares about Dario Amodei ruling the world with his LLMs) but it's also exciting. I think I am happiest today. We're going to do so many wonderful things for so many people now that this is so much cheaper.

    Perhaps it's just the good fortune of being born at this time during this thing and riding that wave, but it feels like the world of computing has just been so full of amazing leaps forward during my life. I look back each time and I think "man, I was doing that thing when I could have been doing it so much better?". And I feel so hopeful for the future.

    • lm28469 4 hours ago
      We're retiring later and later, working more per week, purchasing power is going down, quality of goods is going down, life expectancy is decreasing, child mortality is increasing, teenage suicide is increasing, illiteracy is increasing, &c.

      But trust us this time we'll do incredible things, the same things but more of it, faster and cheaper, will automatically make things amazing!

      • deepsun 1 hour ago
        Crime rates going down and down. Purchasing power grows everywhere in the world (but we want much nicer things now, so don't feel it). Travel is more accessible that it ever was in humanity history. Information keeps getting more and more accessible.

        And literacy rates are increasing. I don't know why you say it's not, just google "literacy rates trend".

        • paulryanrogers 56 minutes ago
          Efficiency gains have primarily benefited the capital owners. Workers ability to buy essentials like housing and healthcare have not gotten worse, not better.

          I can cover every wall of my living space in flat screen color television more cheaply than feed, house, heal, and educate another child in my family.

          • martin-t 17 minutes ago
            I started reading about the industrial revolutions and the evolution of capitalism recently. And it is my understanding that something similar was happening around the second industrial revolution - normal people barely making a living while owners of massive factories and other "means of production" getting richer rand richer.

            That's why communism got so popular in some places and why after capitalism won, it demonized communism so much that people now think those are the only two options and communism is the bad one so capitalism must be the good one.

            There are other options like mutualism or market socialism and people (including me until recently) have never heard of them.

            Cooperatives exist and most people don't even know what that word means.

            We need a system where ownership of both the means of production and more importantly the product goes to the workers. If production is more effective with an assistant ("manager") overseeing them, then can hire one and negotiate his salary collectively. If they need an investment, they can quantify the risk and agree how much the investor gets in return after how long but it should not give the investor a massive chunk of or complete ownership - at most it should give small ownership according to his hourly rate compared to other workers.

        • martin-t 26 minutes ago
          > Crime rates going down and down.

          This scares me. Humans are getting so domesticated and docile they might soon be content with being pets. I am not sure US independence or French revolution could happen today.

          I am obviously not a fan of crime against other peaceful individuals. But crime against an oppressive regime is still crime by that regime's rules.

      • cheema33 3 hours ago
        > We're retiring later and later, working more per week

        That may be true. But, if somebody offered me a time machine to travel back in time and live at any point in history, would I take it? Hell no.

        > purchasing power is going down

        That is not a new thing.

        > quality of goods is going down

        Phones are better. Computers are better. Cars, planes, washing machines ...

        > life expectancy is decreasing

        On the whole, this is not the case.

        > child mortality is increasing

        Globally?

        > illiteracy is increasing

        Globally?

        You seem to have a negative view of things. And sure, many things are not great. But the examples you gave are not it.

        • pixl97 3 hours ago
          Ya some people don't know the difference between their country falling apart versus the world falling apart.
          • lm28469 2 hours ago
            > their country

            Not even, I was taking the US as an example because they're at the front of this "tech will deliver us" hypothesis

          • trgn 2 hours ago
            What does it matter the world gets better when your neighbors do worse?
            • tredre3 2 hours ago
              If all but one of my neighbors were improving, why would I focus on the one that insists on repeatedly shooting itself in the dick?
            • travisjungroth 2 hours ago
              The other people in the world who aren’t your neighbors are also people.
        • lm28469 2 hours ago
          Not globally, just in the place we let these things run at full speed without regulations: the US
      • lstodd 4 hours ago
        Excuse me, but can you please explain this whole concept of 'retirement'?

        It is some point where you just shut down your brain and feed yourself to the fishes?

        Not being an US person I'm struggling with this. How? Unless one loses congnitive capability due to organic brain damage how is this even possible?

        • coldtea 4 hours ago
          If you work most jobs, whether cognitive or manual labor, after some point you can't do them anymore, due to physical and cognitive decline, medical issues, and the plain fact that you can do that shit as a hobby if you really like it, but you shouldn't need to go to some fucking office or greet people in your local Walmart in your late 60s and 70s just to survive.

          We call this stopping of work at that point retirement.

          How about that?

        • anamexis 4 hours ago
          Retirement is the withdrawal from active working life, i.e. having a job. It is not a US concept.
          • samf 4 hours ago
            Right, and a nice thing about software is that retirement doesn’t mean you have to stop doing what you used to do.

            I’m retired (I know, I’m very lucky), and I’ve done as much or more coding since retirement than I did in my job. But to be fair, AI has really changed how I’m going about things, and I’m not sure what the future is going to bring. I really worry about my adult children and their careers.

          • lstodd 4 hours ago
            But that's the point, ain't it? If you voluntarily abandon doing things you are basically declaring "I'm dead, ignore that I'm still breathing".
            • xantronix 4 hours ago
              The notion that one's economic output is equal to one's worth as a person seems pretty wrong-headed, when considering what the purpose of life is.
              • pixl97 3 hours ago
                >when considering what the purpose of life is.

                And what is that exactly?

                At best we seem to be rather large containers to ensure that genes get replicated.

                • xantronix 2 hours ago
                  That's for us to decide as individuals.
                  • pixl97 2 hours ago
                    How can something be both wrong and subjective?
              • lstodd 4 hours ago
                no contest on the first part, but can you enlighten on what is the purpose of life?
                • anamexis 4 hours ago
                  What point are you trying to make?
                  • lstodd 3 hours ago
                    Point being that at no point in your life are you bound to be defined by "job"-"retirement" state transition.

                    Shed it already.

                    • lm28469 2 hours ago
                      When your job and commute is 70% of your awake time I can assure you are very well defined by your job
            • coldtea 4 hours ago
              Only if your life is so insignificant and your interests and social circle so narrow that your paid gig determines the whole of it and is your sole purpose.
              • lstodd 4 hours ago
                But if it ain't so, there is effectively no retirement?
            • lm28469 2 hours ago
              So you're telling me that if you won $1b tomorrow you wouldn't know what to do besides continuing your 9 to 5 until you die?
            • WJW 4 hours ago
              Not having a job anymore is very different from not "doing things" at all.
        • lm28469 2 hours ago
          It's the part where you stop being a wage slave and can enjoy some freedom, I know, such an alien concept
    • coldtea 4 hours ago
      >I look back each time and I think "man, I was doing that thing when I could have been doing it so much better?". And I feel so hopeful for the future.

      The future appears now to be: "Young kids wont have this sense of wonder, or control of the machine, anymore. And a whole lot less will now have a career in IT either".

    • RataNova 4 hours ago
      Learning the lower layer felt like earning access to the next level of reality. You had to understand the constraints to make anything happen at all. Now it increasingly feels like you can just describe the intent and skip straight to the outcome.
    • RGamma 4 hours ago
      And simultaneously we built this huge machine that gives us everything we need to survive on software we don't understand, ready to have it abducted by people who have never done a (positively) productive thing in their lives seemingly any moment now. Monkeys with computers.
      • martin-t 10 minutes ago
        Humans are not smart enough.

        People are either proactive or reactive. Proactive think about the system and its incentives and how to align them for everyone's benefit. Reactive people only complain after they have been exploited.

        Most people are reactive.

        If AI is not a scam, we're gonna see a massive wave of unemployment and only then will many people realize they have spent half of their waking hours making someone else richer and they have no control over what they created.

        And I don't meant just those who build AI. I mean everyone whose work isn't mostly manual/physical.

        They're OK with open source code being turned into statistical patterns and plagiarized en masse. They will only start complaining once their work has been stolen and they are broke.

      • pixl97 3 hours ago
        This is the history of every empire.

        It's also why every empire in history collapsed.

    • pelma 5 hours ago
      I thought for a moment you were serious, but the line about us doing wonderful things with tech gave it away as satire. Yeah no. Best we can do is technofascism and surveillance state. Glad you happy though!
  • NickNaraghi 5 hours ago
    Csikszentmihalyi's flow research[0] basically predicts the author's whole arc here. People are happiest during structured, challenging activities with clear goals and tight feedback loops. Coaching middle schoolers in a gym hits every condition on his list.

    Btw, the other finding worth mentioning is that people consistently predict that free time and relaxation will make them happier, then report the opposite.

    [0] Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience if you haven't read it

  • dgritsko 6 hours ago
    These blog posts are fascinating to read. I don't have a personal blog, but if I did I'm sure I would've written a very similar post as I've been wrestling with similar thoughts over the last few weeks. I have the distinct sense that I will look back on February 2026 as an inflection point, where AI crossed over from being an interesting parlor trick to something that fundamentally and irreversibly altered what I do day-to-day. It's bittersweet, for sure - it feels inevitable that the craft of software development that I've loved for years will be seen as an archaic relic at some point in the not too distant future. It may be several years yet before the impact is broadly felt (the full impact of today's frontier models has yet to be felt by the general public - to say nothing of models that will be released in the next few years) but this train doesn't seem to be slowing down anytime soon. This post was a helpful reminder that who I am is not defined by the code I write (or don't write) - there's so much more to life than code.
    • DonThomasitos 5 hours ago
      One part of me tries to resist and tell you that our craft is not becoming an archaic relic, the other half already knows you‘re right. We just can‘t put the ghost back into the bottle and now‘s a good time to re-calibrate your passion.
      • bityard 4 hours ago
        I look at it like this: Yes, AI can write code. It can write it much faster than I can. Sometimes it can also write it better than I can.

        But: programming languages, libraries, and abstractions are not going away. It is still possible (and might always be possible) to get deep into the weeds of Python or Rust or whatever to understand how those work and really harness them to their full potential, or develop them further. It just won't be _compulsary_ (in most industries) if your only goal is to trade lines of code for dollars in your bank account.

    • UncleOxidant 3 hours ago
      > (the full impact of today's frontier models has yet to be felt by the general public - to say nothing of models that will be released in the next few years)

      We definitely saw some kind of non-linear step function jump in quality around the beginning of the year - it's hard to express how good Claude opus/sonnet 4.6 is now. However, I wonder if we're going to see the same kind of improvement from here? It's kind of like we got to the 80% point but the next 20% is going to be a lot harder/take longer than that first 80% (pareto principle). Also, as more and more code out there is AI generated it's going to be like the snake eating it's own tail. Training models on AI generated code doesn't seem like it will lead to improvements.

  • reconnecting 6 hours ago
    The latest developments in digital culture are somehow more frustrating than anything I saw in the previous 26 years. Experience is replaced by prompts. Taste perfected over the years with defaults.

    I'm not afraid of competition with AI-driven competitors — I'm afraid of people replacing real beauty with A/B mechanics.

    Perhaps this is indeed a good moment to switch to offline.

    Thank you for sharing your inspiring example.

    • jnovek 6 hours ago
      I started programming when I was eleven years old and I’m now in my 40s. I have no idea what to do with the rest of my life.
      • reconnecting 6 hours ago
        Same here. I've long had the feeling that the internet could somehow help the world, but honestly, I don't feel that's the case anymore.
        • DougN7 5 hours ago
          There is a whole lot of crap out there. But I think the Internet HAS been a game changer in lifting people out of poverty and increasing standards of living. Communication is awesome. And although there is a lot of propaganda (which there has always been) there is now also a lot of truth and counter claims. It’s no longer just the rich that have access to information (think of farmers guessing at what their crop was worth). I _hope_ AI will do similarly, but I have my doubts on that one.
          • reconnecting 5 hours ago
            The irony of the moment is that a billionaire in a Michelin-star restaurant and a homeless person on the street are scrolling through the same Instagram feed.
          • samiv 2 hours ago
            Technology doesn't do anything by itself. The result of it on the fabric of the society depends on how it is applied, whether the benefits are distributed to everyone (to some extent) or not. It's possible that taby technology is just used to displace people who lose their livelihoods and income while the benefits flow the capital owning class. In fact all the great productivity boosts that have taken place over the last decades since WW2 have mostly befitted the capital class. That's why a worker still grinds away 8h a week and barely scares by while the "elites" splurge on yacths, mansions and space travel for leisure.
        • reconnecting 5 hours ago
          jnovek, don't listen to him! Piracy is never the way.

          https://youtu.be/9fUjwV4j-H0 (The Offspring - Have You Ever)

          • mvanbaak 5 hours ago
            What if the the alternatives are worse?
      • Remnant44 5 hours ago
        There's a whole lot of us out there. I don't know if there's still a future in the thing that I love, which is where all the malaise comes from.
      • derektank 6 hours ago
        “Have you ever considered piracy? You’d make a wonderful Dread Pirate Roberts”

        https://youtu.be/IIbeFgaYTNs

      • Aeolun 1 hour ago
        Keep going? Just because there’s a different way to do what you like doing doesn’t mean you should stop.

        Or become a carpenter. The world is going to be flooded by them.

      • kakacik 5 hours ago
        Do w hat we did in corporate/banking/other sociopathic envs did decades ago - find another source of fulfillment and happiness. For me its adventures and sports and kids, could be something else for the next joe.

        Or just code as you want as a hobby, unrestrained, for whatever you need or makes you happy.

    • pixl97 3 hours ago
      >I'm afraid of people replacing real beauty with A/B mechanics.

      This has been happening for at least a decade now, no help from LLMs needed.

  • internet2000 6 hours ago
    The moving tiny rectangles framing is interesting, it gets to the heart of why I find all the anti-AI takes so difficult to comprehend. If you never made any effort to connect what you do with what value is added in real life, then it's no wonder better tooling is leaving you lost. Programming (other than code golf) has always been an implementation detail for solving problems IRL.
    • SoftTalker 5 hours ago
      The programming itself is the reward for people who love doing it. It attracts the sort of detail-oriented thinkers who enjoy the doing and don't frame everything in terms of "value added."

      AI is attractive to the sorts of people who have their secretary write their Christmas cards.

      • signatoremo 2 hours ago
        AI helps you to focus on the aspects that you are interested in. Perhaps you care about database nifty stuff, but you may need the front end to make an end to end solution. You can delegate that part to AI
      • cataphract 4 hours ago
        I think there's a middle ground. I like coming up with solutions to problems (mostly technical problems, may even be very low level ones). But I always found writing the code generally tedious. Basically, once I had a good detailed idea of what the implementation would look like, actually executing the plan would bore me.

        AI is still not competent enough to come up with good solutions in many things I work on. So, at least so far, AI has made me happier.

    • tadfisher 3 hours ago
      Carpentry has always been an implementation detail for making furniture. They have been able to purchase flat-pack chairs for all of their lives, but for some reason there are people who learn this skill and have fun slowly making things that factories already make at scale. A subset of those people have made lucrative businesses out of the very human craft that is carpentry, and are able to create custom pieces on-demand that you could never justify retooling a factory to create.

      It is okay to view code as a means to an end. I disagree, preferring to treat code as craft, and striving for better systems that are easy to understand, maintain and extend. And I think that's the source of our disconnect; deeper than one's opinion about AI is one's value of human skill and the effect that has on the output. Maybe I overvalue it, and maybe creating code "manually" is going to look more like carpentry in the future; but you cannot expect to convince a skilled carpenter that an IKEA chair is just as good and accomplishes the same task.

      • internet2000 2 hours ago
        This analogy falls flat because

        a) Carpentry already happens in the real world

        b) There's a clear problem being solved (you need furniture).

        Stretching your analogy to fit my point: pretend that programming is manually sanding wood, while AI-assisted programming is using a belt sander. If you're focused on the chair being built, getting a belt sander to help is great! If you're sanding for the craft (?) of it, focused on the wrist mechanics of rubbing sandpaper up and down, you'd be disappointed.

      • trgn 2 hours ago
        You cant convince anybody an ikea chair is just as good
        • jungturk 2 hours ago
          It easy to convince a college student with $20 that an ikea chair is good. Artisanal is overkill for plenty of scenarios, and definitely those where time or money are constrained.
    • davnicwil 3 hours ago
      I think all it means when we say 'solve problems in real life' is just the stuff you have to do that tooling can't abstract you away from any more.

      The sharp end of the debate now is around what exactly that means in the LLM world. It's extremely unclear what exactly the new level of abstraction unlocked is, or at least how general/leaky it is.

      There's obviously just the stance of enjoying the craft, and that's one thing off to the side, but I think the major source of conflict for those who are more oriented towards living in the top level of abstraction (i.e. what you can do in real life) is between some of the claims being pushed about said level of abstraction and what many still experience in actual reality using these tools.

    • skuxxlife 3 hours ago
      If you see programming purely as a means to an end, then yeah, I get this perspective. But to many there is enjoyment in the _doing_ and the craft of it beyond the end result. It’s why people get into woodworking or knitting despite the fact that it’s much cheaper, faster, and easier to buy a table or a sweater than to make one yourself. Value is subjective, and for some the value of code is not primarily in what you can sell to others.
    • voxl 5 hours ago
      If you've never made any effort to connect what you do to the underlying mathematics, then no wonder you think it's all an "automatible" implementation detail, despite three decades of the industry trying and failing.
      • logicprog 5 hours ago
        What about mathematics means coding isn't automatible?

        Also, hasen't coding gone through many waves of automation now?

  • bloomingeek 5 hours ago
    My new goals are: Seek beauty, Seek happiness and Don't make people sad.

    With a lot of effort, it's working. However, I soon discovered the last goal was the most difficult. Long story short, I keep my mouth shut a lot more. I feared, at first, that this would make me feel I was compromising myself somehow. But I also discovered that sometimes when I shared my opinion, knowing it was correct, I would later regret how I made that person feel. Conclusion on their feelings: There's nothing to be gained by hurting their feelings when they weren't ready to hear the message. Double success, I'm still happy and I didn't cause them any sadness.

  • fortzi 6 hours ago
    OP might love tech, but he sure doesn’t sound like he loved the craft.

    Describing it as sitting in front of a rectangle, moving all rectangles around is so reductive.

    • gombosg 5 hours ago
      Exactly, basically then every desk or office job means sitting next to a box?
    • antonvs 5 hours ago
      I don’t even know what he’s referring to. What are the rectangles he’s “moving around”? And couldn’t you say the same thing about all writers, for example?

      The one downside to the Internet and social media is that truly useless takes can get much more traction than they deserve.

      • Flere-Imsaho 4 hours ago
        CSS boxes!

        Honestly the one thing that I'm really looking forward to is no longer having to touch CSS.

        • antonvs 28 minutes ago
          Oh that makes sense, thanks. I don’t deal with CSS in my work. It seems like an oddly specific thing to reduce “tech” in general to.
  • DonThomasitos 5 hours ago
    Isn‘t it ironic that we software devs laughed for decades when we automated other people‘s work with our code - „it‘s called progress, deal with it, dinosaur!“ But now we see that a meteor might have hit our planet too.
    • pixl97 3 hours ago
      Heh, I've posted here for years and every post I've made saying programmers should unionize has been controversial at best and nearly dead at worst. So many people trust the same system they watch eat others.
    • kakacik 5 hours ago
      I certainly wasn't laughing, plight of a fellow man is nothing positive. But this is usually so abstracted and distant from one's work that unless you have somebody close who gets literally hit themselves is just abstract movement beyond horizon due to myriad forces and random events.
  • jebarker 5 hours ago
    Personally I want to have my cake and eat it here. Tech has amazing potential to make the world a better place to live in and genuinely bring people together. The crowning achievement of AI so far to me is not Claude Code, it’s AlphaFold. I find the documentary DM released about developing it inspiring both as a technology story but also a team achieving things together that make the world better. I want to see more of that and hope I can steer my career in that direction.
  • light_triad 2 hours ago
    Every generation of builders believed their tools defined their value. Then the tools got easier, faster, automated, and the definition had to change.

    But programming didn’t disappear. Writing didn’t disappear. Designing didn’t disappear.

    AI flips the equation: when creation becomes cheap, value shifts from how much you can produce to what changes because you showed up. The ability to have a positive impact has actually expanded.

    • Aeolun 1 hour ago
      I don’t think this whole thing had anything to do with AI or not. It has to do with ‘teaching kids in a gym’ or ‘sitting in front of a screen in an office’.
  • freetime2 5 hours ago
    I honestly don’t understand how anyone has the time and energy to be a coach while working a full-time job. My kids practice three times a week, and usually have games on both Saturday and Sunday - sometimes several hours away. Just getting them to practices and games often feels exhausting to me - I can’t imagine all the planning and scheduling that goes on behind the scenes, or having to show up and actually run things all the time.

    Hats off to youth coaches - you make a huge difference in kids’ lives.

    • Aeolun 1 hour ago
      Pretty certain the coaching is their job for the soccer coaches at our elementary school. 6 years of kids each with 3 practices a week + matches.
  • tap-snap-or-nap 1 hour ago
    We are just priced out of having this type of happiness due to high cost of living in a first world urban environment.
    • Aeolun 1 hour ago
      Every single environment that has a critical mass of people will have an elementary and middle school. How could you possibly be priced out of this?
  • 0898 2 hours ago
    Shaan Puri has also talked about how he's been coaching a youth basketball team on the My First Million podcast recently. He says it's one of the best things he's ever done.
  • colinnordin 4 hours ago
    > But improving each kid’s skill and confidence was the real mission. Instead of my desk job, I’d be asking Clayton how we could make Corey¹ use his body for rebounding. Or how Monte’s soccer skills could be best leveraged. Or how Evan, our best player, could become an on-court leader.

    I wonder how software development would be like if we had coaches like this.

    • data-ottawa 4 hours ago
      I have had managers like this and it was fantastic. I’ve tried to be a mentor like this and enjoyed it too.

      It feels like since 2022 the industry has been too rushed to run this way though.

    • RataNova 4 hours ago
      I suspect a lot of people don't actually dislike software development, they dislike developing without anyone invested in their development
    • matthewpick 4 hours ago
      I miss mentoring junior engineers in-person
  • hinkley 2 hours ago
    To ask the question Ted Lasso never answers:

    What is a Hoosier?

  • RataNova 4 hours ago
    A lot of people aren't actually chasing leisure or money as much as they're chasing irreplaceability
  • shermantanktop 4 hours ago
    My boss is a technologist. Adding computers to problems makes him happy. Getting people out of the way makes him happy.

    I’m an IC (no direct reports) and I’m a “humanist”. Helping people become better and more skilled makes me happy, in the same way the coach here got joy from the goofball making a great play.

    On paper we should probably switch jobs. I have way more technical depth, but the crucial difference is that he is more goal-driven, better at managing upward, and more in tune with political trends.

  • billylo 4 hours ago
    I use my spare time helping kids at a FIRST robotics team. It's fun.
  • gedy 5 hours ago
    I "move rectangles on screen" to pay for Kids and House. That's what makes me happy, and jobs I enjoy don't. There's no wake up call necessary.
  • hyperhello 6 hours ago
    > For years, you’ve sat in front of a rectangle, moving tinier rectangles, only to learn that AI can now move those rectangles 10x better.

    In response to this I would say that being in the industry comes with a lot of learned role-playing, and if you are no longer happy role-playing your job in one way, throw it entirely out and find a new path.

    • SoftTalker 6 hours ago
      > only to learn that AI can now move those rectangles 10x better

      Teams are already using AI to scout opponents and plan game strategy. IDK how much that will ever happen at the youth level because they generally don't keep detailed stats at that age but it will be coming to high school sports for sure, if it isn't already being used.

  • carabiner 3 hours ago
    Just a reminder of how millennial-centric HN is. Everyone here is in their 40s and moving to the suburbs to raise their kids, and this article provides validation.
  • engineer_22 1 hour ago
    I had a similar coaching experience. I took 2 years off and I'm excited to jump back into it this spring. It's tremendous fun and the impact is easy to discern.
  • stopping 54 minutes ago
    I find it odd that so many comments here are fixating on the "AI can do my job 10x better" throwaway line.

    I've been grappling with a lack of meaning in my software engineering job for over a decade now, well before the advent of AI. Working in a modern software organization means that most of your day-to-day effort isn't spent using your technical skills, but on navigating misaligned organizational structures in order to achieve even the smallest goal. The feedback loop is so drawn out that there is no feel-good dopamine rush at the end of a project, only relief that it no longer has to occupy space in your brain.

    I'm driven by solving problems for others and seeing their lives improve as a result. But we're so disconnected from real users that it doesn't really make a difference if you reduce your product's crash rate from 2% to 1%; even with recognition ("You did good work", a pat on the back, a peer bonus, or maybe even a promotion), it just doesn't do it for me anymore, especially when any tangible positive outcome is completely hidden from me. I would rather have been ignorant to these problems and not suffered the stress in the first place.

    Even when I try to help my fellow developers in a way where it's much easier to feel the impact, it's hard to make a case for a better engineering culture if means that everyone has to put in an epsilon of extra effort in a day and age where every team ascribes to a scarcity mindset. I actually believe I can have more impact building a medium-sized product by myself with the help of AI rather than fighting for scraps in a software organization which pushes and pulls randomly in all directions.

    Over time, my tolerance for nonsense and systemic "injustice" (i.e. incentive misalignment) has effectively disappeared. Every time I rub against an unnecessary barrier that was put up by another person, intentionally or not, my motivation simply drops to zero. I constantly have to wear an emotional blanket to keep from feeling angry and frustrated, and it makes it hard to experience genuine emotional fulfillment in my life outside of work. I simply have no patience left to spend in my life outside of work, where it actually matters.

    I 100% identify with this blog post. I feel more happiness taking a friend's kids to the climbing gym and listening to them tell me about their experience doing a difficult climb. I feel more happiness from mentoring a robotics team of goofy but driven teenagers. I feel more happiness when my writer friend tells me that she still uses a wooden tablet stand that I built every day. I want my life to feel like it's making a difference for other people in a way that is unique to my talents and skills.

    Life is not an optimization puzzle where the goal is to maximize wealth, status, influence, or prestige. Yet it feels like that's really all that a corporate job can offer you these days.

  • RickJWagner 5 hours ago
    I coached sports for all 3 of my kids. Great times.

    One year, I had a superior athlete on my youth football team. A foot shorter than everybody else and skinny as a stick, the boy had the gift of speed. He’d run like the wind, arms and legs flailing wildly. It looked like he’d cover distance twice as fast as the other kids.

    I took full advantage of the situation. Every game, I started by getting wonder boy the ball until we’d racked up enough points to be comfortable. Then the others got turns. We went the regular season undefeated and I began to convince myself I really had coaching talent. Maybe I could help out at the high school, or the local college! The sky was the limit, I was a natural.

    Then came the championship game, also against an undefeated team. Their team had a wonderboy, too. He was actually faster than my speedster!

    Predictably, their coach played it just like I had. Through superior speed, they took a healthy lead early in the game and never let it go.

    I enjoyed all my years of youth coaching, but that year was just magical. Right up ‘till the last game. It was a memorable year.

  • tayo42 6 hours ago
    I just wrote my own blog post thinking about this. I guess alot of us feel kind of weird right now.
    • mmmm2 5 hours ago
      Yeah, I decided to become a "professional" musician a few months ago after quitting my last tech job. I'm not amazing, but I've got some places to play, and I'm starting to give lessons, etc.

      It's not an easy job, but I feel something I haven't felt in a long time as a software developer: fulfillment and contentment. Best of luck to anyone on a similar journey.

      • tayo42 5 hours ago
        If I didn't have a mortgage and family that would work!
    • sntran 4 hours ago
      I feel similarly. Being laid off and doing job search recently got me thinking about switching to become an electrician. I don't mind starting over and lower wage, but mortgage and family depending on me still hold me off.
      • EddieB 3 hours ago
        Had this thought multiple times over the years. However, reality in the UK is training cost and time (~2 years with 2 days a week college + at least ~£5k cost and further 2 years gaining experience) can be quite a blocker- difficult to achieve with dependents for most. Then throw in the reality of domestic work and building up experience. Greener grass and all that
      • tryauuum 4 hours ago
        any electricians here who want to give a piece of advice?
    • gobeavs 2 hours ago
      Curious to read if you want to share a link. I've been thinking about this too.
  • pppoiuy 4 hours ago
    gggoip