Grinding Away: Iris Classon

Iris Classon is a developer and Microsoft MVP. She has had a lot of success across the last decade plus. This is her second career, deciding in 2011 to leave her profession as a registered clinical dietician to learn to program. Here’s an excerpt of an interview:

“Well, the first few days sucked. I mean—yes, you might want to beep that out. Because our teachers are doing, counting, talking about binaries, and I had forgotten all the math. They’re talking about binary numbers and doing all the calculations. They’re talking about hardware as well, which I didn’t know anything about. I know now, but not then.

I was so frustrated. On the second day, I was like, “I want to go home.” I was kind of upset and stuff, so my teacher drove me home and we had a long chat, and he said, “Iris, come back. We kind of need a personality like that. You just come back. Give it the rest of the week and you’ll see.”

On the third day, when I came back—I did come back—we started programming. We did our first little console application, and I just realized I just got it. I would turn around and look at my classmates. Some of them just seemed confused and I was like, “What is the problem? I mean, this is logic.”

For the first time in my life, I understood what was written.”

Her first year of programming is documented on her site, and it’s a neat read to me. The important thing is to remember she documented this daily during that year. It’s summarized now, but she was grinding away.

What I like about this

This is a story I think shows practically how to improve yourself and get better at something new. I have remembered this story as I tried to learn to coach over the last ten years, and as I continue to work on trying to improve my skills.

This is also in tech, and it gives you a way to look at yourself and try to improve your skills to find a better position, or maybe the position you really want.

What I don’t like about this

Not everyone can take time off to improve for a year, though this is something most of you could do across 3-4 years.

I also don’t want to make it seem like anyone can do this. Everyone has certain genetic gifts, and they are drawn to certain things. Iris clearly is drawn to very logical work and has a gift for programming. Your experience, raw talent, and understanding might not be as good.

You can get better, but you walk your path and you have to remember that. Reading other stories can sometimes feel like I can’t do that. You won’t likely do the same thing, but you can improve yourself a lot of you grind away.

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