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	<title>User:8alpreet - Revision history</title>
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	<updated>2026-05-04T07:24:16Z</updated>
	<subtitle>Revision history for this page on the wiki</subtitle>
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		<id>https://wiki.opensourceecology.org/index.php?title=User:8alpreet&amp;diff=320891&amp;oldid=prev</id>
		<title>Marcin: Creating user page for new user.</title>
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		<updated>2026-03-07T14:39:57Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;Creating user page for new user.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;New page&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;div&gt;I&amp;#039;ve always had a tough time writing intros and bios, because I don&amp;#039;t know WHAT to share first. What&amp;#039;s most important to know about me? I suppose it&amp;#039;s that I&amp;#039;d rather go my own way and fail, than accept the norm and succeed. I&amp;#039;ve come to realize this about myself recently and a part of me, the one that seeks safety in established norms, is resisting even as I type this. I&amp;#039;ve been on this relentless search the past eight or so years of life, it wasn&amp;#039;t a search towards, rather it was a search OUT of a &amp;quot;regular&amp;quot; life. I recall the idea of being forty and raising kids filling me with dread back in high school. Then through out my time UC Irvine for my Informatics degree, I never quite felt at peace. It was a terribly frustrating time because I knew I was capable but I wasn&amp;#039;t able to perform in academia. I put all the focus on my academic performance, but the issue was deeper. After leaving college and working as a full-stack engineer at a large healthcare payor, my dissatisfaction with life rose to a new pitch. I achieved the title, salary, and status I thought I wanted in life but I was absolutely miserable. Luckily, I discovered a certain author who just threw on the lights and illuminated life for me. I would say I devoured his books but really they devoured me. Maybe a year after those books (listening to each MANY times), about two and a half years into my software role and much to the disappointment of my parents, I quit my job. No grand plan, I just felt that I had to quit. I was planning to take a year off but that turned into almost three. I experimented along the way with learning embedded software, fixing things around the house, fixing my family&amp;#039;s cars, but I never quite found IT. I didn&amp;#039;t know what it was anyways. While the author illuminated the TRUTH about my/the universe&amp;#039;s existence, I didn&amp;#039;t get an operating manual for my life in the world. Through a connection, I&amp;#039;ve ended up working for a healthcare related startup in Silicon Vally. I&amp;#039;ve been there for a few months, but I continue to find myself unengaged. The company goals, the lifestyle, and software just don&amp;#039;t make me feel connected to life. I felt more satisfied and engaged when I fixed cars or replace a toilet set. Getting software to work is satisfying too, but I am not engaged in the process. The process of fixing/building something physical is what really speaks to me. I realize I want to do all sorts of stuff without limits like, but not limited to: hardware, software, construction, writing, and animal-agriculture. If any archetype, defined loosely, fits me, it&amp;#039;s the Renaissance Man. I&amp;#039;m driven by curiosity. I want to do interesting stuff, everything else is background. Things like financial growth, societal respect, romantic success (though I do have a propensity for this) don&amp;#039;t put wind in my sails. Money and respect are useful as far as their utility in everyday life; dogged pursuit in the accumulation of either seems misguided to me.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Note: please excuse errors in structure and grammar. I prefer the raw style, but I will (eventually) try to improve my writing skills.&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>Marcin</name></author>
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