Running on Passion

Last week Thursday Refresh Munich held a "Running on Passion" event where two developers showed how passion comes through in their work, as a music producer and as a hobby game developer. It was that same passion that brought my Refresh co-founders Elias, Sebastian, Dana and I together in 2011. Designer and developer were neither roles nor job titles to us. It was passion.

@niorad on stage at Refresh Munich
@niorad on stage at Refresh Munich

Six years later, we've successfully organized two UX Munich conferences, held 50+ Stammtische (German meetups with beer) and more. Dana and Sebastian have co-founded their own consulting company and startup. Elias works as a music producer as well as a software engineer. In a nutshell, my co-founders are still self-employed and very much a part of the startup community.

And me? I'm working for the corporation.

Passion != Job

I showed up at the Refresh Event disorganized and stressed. Most of the Refresh regulars are friends. They asked me: are you sure getting a job was the right decision? Are you're happy? I looked tired. I am tired. Am I happy? I have to refer to the Oatmeal's comic on how to be perfectly unhappy and answer no. As he wrote:

I'm busy. I'm interested. I'm fascinated. I do things that are meaningful to me even if they don't make me "happy".

— The Oatmeal

The Oatmeal's creator Matthew Inman runs until his toenails fall off. I've done that too. I also climb until my hands bleed. I write code until my wrists hurt.

Passion is Meaningful Work

A colleague asked me the same question today. Reality check!

I've known the answer since last Thursday. I need to spend less time in emails, meetings, on the phone and code more. IT transformation is both fascinating and challenging, keeping me busy. But it's not meaningful to me - not yet anyway. It'll take a few more years. It's started. Mindsets are starting to change. But change is slow going and not tangible.

I find meaning in writing code, making things, breaking things and solving problems. And that's the luxury of being at a large company. We have so many problems to choose from.

Currently I am working on helping teams integrate continuous integration and delivery into their workflows. I'm giving a talk at MunichJS in 3 days on the topic. I've been busy single handedly organizing all the logistics including budgeting for hosting the event.

Now, at 9:30pm, it's time to stop emails and organizing and do what really drives me - buliding things and fixing problems with code.

And have fun

P.S. I also have fun. That's why I build drag and drop interfaces that eat your files…

screenshot of drag and drop interface
screenshot of drag and drop interface

Come to MunichJS on Thursday and meet that creature and learn about how CI/CD is required to create sophisticated microservice architectures.