The more content I discover, the tinier and irrelevant I feel. I go down a rabbit hole of brilliant relevations of one person after the other, and I come out tired and discouraged. People are writing crazy compilers, optimizers, devising mathematical mathematical theorems etc. and finding concerete applications of their work everywhere. For instance, I just discovered the blog of Aleksey Kladov today and the depth and breadth of his work made my jaw drop.
Now, I realize this is rather superficial to talk about. I myself work on low-level systems, writing non-trivial code and trying to solve all sorts of interesting problems. Senior engineers and professors have told me that I'm brilliant. But when I'm alone with myself, I feel like I know that I'm a nobody. I try not to compare myself; but I'm also unable to shrug these feeling off, however indirect.
P.S. Not intended as a humblebrag. I truly need external input at this point. Sorry if this is offensive to some.
You're reading articles good enough to come through to you, from millions of people actively trying to get theirs read. There will be millions of great articles that most of us will never even discover.
I think you should spend at bit of time thinking on the scale of the world, the scale of combined human effort, and try to consider the statistical chance that something any individual does will "make it" to the top, even of hacker news..
Now, also consider whether you want to be spending your time becoming someone who contributes in that way instead of the way you currently do. Consider the amount of brilliant people doing work that nobody will ever see.
There's nothing wrong in being a "nobody" in the grand scheme of things, your primary motivation in life has probably not been to have the world know your name, if so, you'd likely have pursued a different career. But the feeling is familiar, I think, to most of us.
My personal fix to this is to think on it, and maybe sometimes make a little side-project, that's guaranteed to not be brilliant or even good, and post it somewhere online, and enjoy the little bit of attention it got.
I also struggle to accept my place in the world, to be honest, I've gotten further in my life than I thought I would, and still, feel disappointed in myself because I've not done anything great, or contributed to or furthered any field in any meaningful way. But I try to keep in mind that, most people aren't and of those who do, orders of magnitude more are trying hard and still fail, and honestly, I don't want it _THAT_ bad, I can conclude that, because when I look at my own efforts to "become somebody", they are fairly low, and so it's no surprise that I'm a nobody, just coding away and generally being content with what I do.
You think Pablo Picasso was the best artist of his time? Probably not. He was picked by a bunch of rich, powerful people... Had they chosen to spend millions of dollars on the works of a different artist, that other artist would now be famous and nobody would know who Picasso is. It's also why almost all famous artists knew each other or had some social connection; it's mostly about social networking with rich, powerful people - Talent is secondary. It's the same in every industry where the quality of output cannot be easily or objectively measured.
Unfortunately, software development ability is very hard to measure. It can take years to properly evaluate someone's ability. Also, to rub salt into the wound, coders who are good at solving puzzles and other short-term problems are often regarded as better than those who are able to solve long-term problems (e.g. through good software architecture)... Even though the second one is far more valuable economically. It just takes a lot more time to prove that someone is a good coder in the long run so this leaves more room for choosing winners arbitrarily (for example; arbitrarily using 'short-term puzzle-solving ability under time pressure' as the criteria for deciding who should get jobs).
So basically, don't beat yourself up if you're not 'chosen'. It could mean that you're mediocre but it could also mean that you're exceptional beyond the grasp of powerful incumbents. Think Galileo and the Catholic Church.
If you spend your day all busy and stressed out about computer things and then go home and spend all your time on more intellectual or virtual entertainment then your brain is fully primed to work more on those things.
My advice is to disconnect and focus on relationships and people.
#1 Most people will ONLY talk about their (possibly very few) successes and brilliant ideas and be very silent about the (possibly many) times they mde mistaks or spoke foolishly, etc. (so you have no real way to know the rate of good/bad ideas or products they generate).
#2 you are comparing yourself (single person) not only against a multitude of people, but to a "selected multitude" that believe (rightly or wrongly) to have had an idea worth being talked about.
Then, when/if you find some single person (like the Aleksey Kladov you mentioned) that you believe has an exceptional depth and breadth of knowledge in a given field, it is very possible that that person is simply exceptional.
I think we all have (even those like me that have not the capability to understand their work) some reverence towards scientists like (say) Einstein or Feynmam but ask yourself how many classes of 30 something people get a degree in physics at each university in the world each year (and very likely are all very good and smart professionals) you never heard of.
"The more you know who you are, and what you want, the less you let things upset you."
There's nothing wrong with admiring and respecting and feeling inspired by what others have accomplished, but I've found it has very little to do with my own personal feeling of self-worth.
Second understand that what separates you from these people is they have something to show for what they did. How do you expect people to find your “brilliance” if you don’t show it off somehow? They work for their recognition. People using your “low-level systems” won’t automatically think you’re brilliant because…what? Because it works? Is that the bar?
Write some blog posts. Open source some projects. Give some talks. If you do all that and no one cares, maybe it’s not the rest of the world that has the problem.
I used to compare myself to others all the time, thinking about who did what by what age etc., but in reality it's just useless and fake. It used to be that maybe you compared yourself to the other kid at school who was good at something. Now you compare yourself to somebody who made it famous on the internet who's like the "best in the world" at something. Makes comparisons like that horrible for your mental health. These days I'm just happy to have decently paying job so I can pay my taxes, which mostly contribute to many good things in my country, meaning I can still be a positive force.
I'm not the world #1 badminton champion. So?
If you had the privilege of studying in good schools that helped mold you, acknowledge how rare that privilege is worldwide.
If you are self-taught,be proud of yourself, many people lack the discipline or motivation.
Once you reach some goals and get some recognition, youll probably start hanging out with people who also have great accomplishments, and invariably some of them will have greater accomplishments than your own. Its a balance between being inspired but not comparing youself to others.
Its similar to how it works with money, you make some, buy a nice house and a BMW x3. Then the guy next door gets an x5, So you get an x6. Then at the golf club you hear some people are only flying on chartered planes, you start doing that and you start meeting people who have their own plane. It never stops.
I would say, ask yourself why do yo need to compare yourself with anyone? By your own account you do very interesting work, why is that not enough? Start from there.
By all means, do what you feel you would enjoy doing and balance it off with the needs of society (by making sure you earn enough currency to live).
If you feel you want to become a better researcher or a better chess player, go and do it. Keep in mind there is no reason comparing yourself to others. Everyone's life is vastly different.
Maybe that brilliant researcher has a broken family, maybe a great philosopher is broke and living in a barrel. What's the point of comparing yourself to someone else? Compare yourself to your past self and try to improve. And don't fret if you become worse, you'll have the rest of your life to improve.
I'd recommend reading something about stoicism: https://www.orionphilosophy.com/academy-stoicism/stoicism-fo...
This is called knowledge. This is a good thing, keep going.
>I go down a rabbit hole of brilliant relevations of one person after the other, and I come out tired and discouraged.
Compare yourself only with the person you were yesterday
Comparing yourself to others is completely fruitless, will generate desires, and will cause suffering for yourself.
When you are say 30 you might see someone driving the new Chevy Corvette C8. Such a beautiful car being driven by an old dude who is barely touching the accelerator. You desire to have a corvette as well, maybe something better? But you dont have it and cant afford it and you suffer. But did that old dude have a corvette at 30? Nope, he was looking at corvette c3 back in the day with astronauts driving it and had the same desires and suffering.
Instead you should plan, 'how do I get to the point where i can buy that Corvette C9 in some time. I'll have it decades earlier than that guy and I wont be blind and can use the throttle to its max.'
What does that plan look like? Maybe it means you need to save more or go learn Rust. I'd bet Rust will survive, you could go do that.
You have to figure out what the end point looks like; then reverse engineer. Go look at job postings, what are they asking for? Go get those things in the next year. Then you apply for the job. In the interview you explain this very process that brought you to them. You get hired and you are now on the way to getting that corvette. When preorders of the C9 open, you show up and have the cash.
Here's the clincher. Before you even get there, you'll find the interest in the C9 wanes. You saw a dude driving the F150 lightning and now you want that. You realize that these desires are the real problem. You learn to break the desires.
Also, you don’t know for certain what kind of person you will become. Who knows what your experience today will bring you in the future?
It takes perspective and insight to see just how brilliant our ancestors were, and it gives me joy each time I learn some new tool they left behind for us. It also gives me joy when I pass those mental and actual tools on to others to add to their toolkits.
We're all tool makers, in the end. Our tools can be art, books, programs, or goods and services used by others.
I myself am joyful that there is always more to learn.
Try to be grateful for x y z, and try not focus on 1st world problems like your unfounded imposter syndrome. ZZ
I think about it sometimes. It is an ego/attention thing imo if you need other people to say "great job". But you can't live in a vacuum either.
I mean part of it is personal interest, I was watching people reverse engineer an s-band transponder from the Apollo missions like cool but what is the point.
I guess just because you won't be an Einstein doesn't mean what you're doing isn't worth it. Personal satisfaction.
I used to love building/flying model airplanes until I got into social media. Then everything I made I had to post online/get upvotes. I lost the passion in it overtime because I was more interested in impressing people.
Nowadays I will build things even if it's a piece of a crap because I had fun figuring it out from scratch.
This other thing I ran into is ego-satisfaction where I would share a fantasy/idea/sketch before it was real/work done for the upvotes.
I also am aware there is just an innate capability/caliber. Like I am not a math guy.
I get the "place in the world" thing in another way eg. being poor but I think I can change it.
Oh yeah the other field I think about this is regarding physical attractiveness/relationships ha. I'm not killing it in that department.
To be fair I still post my crap on a blog, whether or not someone reads it is something else.
I spend time deciding what matters to me, then I fill my mind and heart with it. I don’t generally pay attention to what everyone else is doing, unless it helps me with what I’ve decided is worth doing, or makes me aware of something great that I’ve missed. I definitely don’t compare myself to some external standard. My life, my measuring stick.
At the end of my life I will die, and at that moment I will be alone, no matter how many friends surround me. In that moment, I will have things I’m proud of and things I regret, and they will based entirely on my own value judgements and experiences, not on other people’s ideas about what matters. So I focus on that. What will I regret? What will I be proud of?
It works for me, where other things have not. Perhaps this gives you a contrasting perspective. Perhaps I just needed to write it out. Either way, best of luck and may you find freedom in your own way.
As the dollar meter keeps running relentlessly you can imagine yourself being one split of a second somewhere there, and then you can imagine the sea of people working hard at compilers, optimizers, math etc. blasting you all at once with their brilliant observations. It's only natural to get overwhelmed if you expose yourself to the aggregate of the most brilliant and productive humans, because as rare as they might be, the human population is so staggeringly big that there are LOTS of them. You might not be doing so bad compared to the rest of the humanity though ;)
[0] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8YUWDrLazCg (A Million Dollars vs A Billion Dollars, Visualized: A Road Trip)
What you’re encountering is existential angst; we live in a world with over 7 billion people and the reality is that for 99.9999% of us, our existence will be forgotten entirely within a hundred years of our death. The only people we tend to remember culturally are the horrible ones. At best, you are a cog in a machine and at worst, you give in to the nihilism.
For me, the solution to this was not to focus pouring more of myself into work, but to focus on surrounding myself with people who make the day to day more bearable. The project of my life is not to produce more economic output, but to build the connections with the people I share my life with.
Life is long, and most of us are nobody. The people who can help make your life more bearable are probably also nobody. Surround yourself with family / community and don’t focus so much on “legacy”. Nobody is gonna build a statue of you.
I love listening to great complicated music, but I don't know how to play an instrument, and I've come to find peace in that I will never achieve any kind of musical instrument mastery. Its within my realm of possibility if I so choose, but I refuse to give up the things that would have to make way for it. It's my choice, and I'm conscious of that, so I can live with it.
I've recently come to realise that I have had to cut more things than expected out of my life. And it's fine, because the things that are left are the top priorities - I get to spend more time at X, which I love, at the cost of Y, which I only like, or love slightly less. Distillation of self.
Can't do everything, that's why there are other people.
I found I’m much happier and more secure when I began to think of others more as a collective that I’m a part of, instead of as a bunch of atomized competitors.
Of course, the fact I'm exceptionally good doesn't hurt ;-)
What matters is you should get clear about what you want and how you will get there.
As for successes of other people - the fact that they succeeded means success is possible, likely also to you. Learn from successful people by studying their stuff and the ways the go about things and see if you can apply those lessons to the domain you want to excel in.
All that being said, also remember this: its OK to be mediocre and most of us are. In the grand scheme of things, we are just a particular incrustation on some edge of a possibly infinite fractal structure... don't let this stop you from trying to be great, but also don't let the self-imposed pressure kill the everyday joy of doing stuff and just being a human. Good luck and have fun
I have been testing this belief system for 35 years. It has worked well for me and given me a perspective on time, ambition, tough times and good times.
The other thing is: no person is an island. The rust compiler is the work of an absurdly large amount of people, the most visible members of the community absolutely deserve their reputation, but you must not forget that rust is mostly people like you and I. People who may have contributed a tinny bit and do not get a wide recognition.
1. You cannot control results, just your efforts. So keep at it and don't worry about failures/lack of brilliance (don't seek failures ofcourse). 2. Trust there is a higher power (you don't need to be religious about this). There is pretty big chance you just stumbled into your bad luck the same way most of the "great folks" stumbled into their greatness (I am pretty sure you are not working orders of magnitude less than them).
The problem with life is that you only have so much time to do what you want to do. So it’s up to you where you spend your efforts.
Being good enough to truly appreciate what greatness really means is usually sufficient. If you would like to understand how that all feels, look up the BWV 1006 prelude.
I would suggest that you start mindfulness practices. In this way you would simply observe the feeling of being "nobody" without trying to shrug it off. And once you achieve the "indifferent observer" state, these feelings simply stop appear and the whole different perspective opens for you.
You don’t have to accept a place in the world because you don’t even really have one, just your idea of what that means. So run with it.
That said, I accept that I'm a nobody in this world, and I leave nothing important in the world. I still want to improve myself but I don't have high hopes if I look at the number of uncompleted projects along the way.
If you can improve one industry a bit more than it is today, isn't that a sufficient place in the world?
we are blessed and cursed with different gifts.
no one measures up.
so stopping measuring and start living.
It’s bullsht.
You can either decide to try stop playing the game of capitalism, or look down instead of looking up while playing it.
The later means you are still playing the game, but it will be easier to cope with your suffering and you might just make some friends.
You are only seeing a deep truth that others cannot see; your work is insignificant. Go out and help someone less fortunate and you will see your true significance.
Read the "Discourses" of Epictetus for some perspective;
In every act consider what precedes and what follows, and then proceed to the act. If you do not consider, you will at first begin with spirit, since you have not thought at all of the things which follow; but afterwards when some consequences have shown themselves, you will basely desist (from that which you have begun). “I wish to conquer at the Olympic games.” [And I too, by the gods: for it is a fine thing]. But consider here what precedes and what follows; and then, if it is for your good, undertake the thing. You must act according to rules, follow strict diet, abstain from delicacies, exercise yourself by compulsion at fixed times, in heat, in cold; drink no cold water, nor wine, when there is opportunity of drinking it. In a word you must surrender yourself to the trainer, as you do to a physician. Next in the contest, you must be covered with sand, sometimes dislocate a hand, sprain an ankle, swallow a quantity of dust, be scourged with the whip; and after undergoing all this, you must sometimes be conquered. After reckoning all these things, if you have still an inclination, go to the athletic practice. If you do not reckon them, observe you will behave like children who at one time play as wrestlers, then as gladiators, then blow a trumpet, then act a tragedy, when they have seen and admired such things. So you also do: you are at one time a wrestler (athlete), then a gladiator, then a philosopher, then a rhetorician; but with your whole soul you are nothing: like the ape you imitate all that you see; and always one thing after another pleases you, but that which becomes familiar displeases you. For you have never undertaken anything after consideration, nor after having explored the whole matter and put it to a strict examination; but you have undertaken it at hazard and with a cold desire.
So have confidence/faith in yourself, use others as inspiration/motivation and only compare your "current" self to your "previous" self for improvement.
That doesnt mean you cant live a meaningful life to you.
Accept it and move on.
> I feel like I know that I'm a nobody. I try not to compare myself; but I'm also unable to shrug these feeling off, however indirect
Everyone is a nobody even famous people. Everyone also feels that way, if you don't feel that way you are probably a psychopath, but that's also fine.
Focus on what matters, wealth, leisure time, whatever you pick keep in mind the clock is always ticking.
Small clarification fame really does not matter, it just makes wealth easier to attain usually.
Contribution to science or humanity in general should never be your focus, it usually happens as a side-effect of work you do either for money or because you enjoy it.