I got selected for a placement opportunity at my college.
Out of everyone including people who code better than me, people with better grades,people who I genuinely thought deserved it more
I got selected.
And my first thought wasn't excitement.
It was "why me?"
Not the LinkedIn version where someone says"I still feel like I'm learning every day!"
The real version.
The version where you see someone's resume and feel your stomach drop.Where you pass an interview and think "they made a mistake."Where you build a project and feel guilty because AI helped you write the code. Where you have certifications but know that lakhs of other students have the same ones.Where nothing feels unique enough.Where nothing feels like enough.
That version.
A company came to my college.
They wanted resumes.They shortlisted fifteen to twenty people.
Some of the best coders in my batch didn't get shortlisted.
Maybe their resume structure wasn't right.Maybe it was luck.
Maybe the system is just that unpredictable.
But I got selected.
And then I got the internship opportunity.
When I went the experienced people there were genuinely impressed.Not by my grades. Not by my CGPA.By my curiosity.
The fact that I touched different technologies not because my syllabus demanded it but because I wanted to know what they felt like.
That meant something to them.
And in that moment I realized a lot of people don't know what I know.Just like I don't know what a lot of people know.
Nobody is complete.
Not even the seniors.
Here's something I've never seen
anyone write about honestly.
Most of my projects I choose the idea.I design the system. But the development phase?AI writes a significant portion of the code.
And I feel guilty about it every single time.
Like I didn't really build it.
Like if someone looked closely enough they'd see the seams.
Like I'm presenting something as mine that isn't fully mine.
But here's what I've slowly started understanding —
I chose what to build.I understood the problem.I designed the solution.I knew when something was wrong.I explained it to experienced people
and they were impressed.
The tool doesn't define the builder.A carpenter who uses a power drill didn't build less than one who used a hand saw.
The guilt is real.But so is the work.
I look at my certifications and think thousands of people have these exact same ones.
IBM. AWS. HackerRank.Every student is collecting them.
Every resume looks the same.
What makes mine different?
And then I remember certifications are not the proof.
What you do with the knowledge is.
The person who completed AWS certification and then wrote a blog post explaining cloud cost optimization to other students that person stands out.
Not because of the certificate.
Because of what they did after.
I don't like JavaScript.
I said it.
It doesn't feel logical to me.
The syntax feels inconsistent.
PHP feels similar rules that don't always make sense.
In one interview they asked me JavaScript questions.I told them honestly "I learned it in bachelor's but I'm not
comfortable with it right now."
They said "That's fine. We work with JavaScript a lot here.It's actually the language behind React, TypeScript, Angular."
And I felt small for a second.
Because I use React.And I don't like the language it's built on.
But they weren't bothered.
They valued the honesty more than the knowledge.
Someone in my batch built something I wish I had built.
I won't call it pure jealousy.
It was jealousy mixed with curiosity mixed with a fire that said I want to build something better than that.
And that feeling uncomfortable as it is is the most productive feeling I've ever had as a developer.
When someone is better than me I don't want to bring them down.I want to reach their level.And then go further.
That jealousy became projects.
Those projects became my portfolio.That portfolio got me selected.
Someone will always be better than you.Always. In every room. At every level.
Even when I join a company I'll look at seniors and think "they know so much more than me."
And that will light a fire.And I'll learn everything they know. And then I'll want to know more.
That's not impostor syndrome winning.That's impostor syndrome becoming fuel.
The difference between developers
who grow and developers who freeze is what they do with that feeling.
Freeze and you stay stuck.Move anyway and the feeling slowly starts to feel less like fear
and more like direction.
You are not a fraud.
You are someone who hasn't learned everything yet.
Nobody has.
Nobody ever will.
The impostor feeling means you care.It means you have standards.
It means you know there's more to learn.
That's not a weakness.
That's exactly the kind of person
a good company wants to hire. 😊
When did you last feel like an impostor?
And what did you do with that feeling?
Drop it honestly below 👇
Not the polished version.
The real one.