Journey Map · Node 01

The Seed

Where the data-first eye came from — and how pressure turned a knack into a trusted craft.

A strength became the foundation — and later, the thing that had to change.

Where the eye came from

Natural eyeData appeared as shapes, not lists
PressureUnknown stack, no fallback, build anyway
Trusted craftA survival skill became the first thing reached for
When you survive on a skill, you do not just keep it. You believe in it.

The Seed

Before I had the vocabulary for it, I saw data as shapes. Entities, relationships, the way information wants to organize itself — it arrived as a picture, not a list. It was a knack, not yet a discipline.

The knack became load-bearing in 2000.

Two days after I landed in this country, with about two years of experience to my name, the startup I had joined changed its stack overnight — ASP one day, Java the next. I was there as a data architect, and suddenly I was expected to help build something close to Amazon, in a language I did not know, with no fallback and no time to be afraid of it.

So I reached for the one thing I could see clearly. I could not yet write the Java, but I could see the data — the entities, the relationships, the shape the system needed underneath whatever language sat on top. I anchored the build on the part I understood and learned the rest in the gaps: late, fast, under pressure that did not care whether I was ready.

It worked.

And working under that kind of stress does something a calmer education never does — it fuses a natural instinct to your hands. The eye stopped being a knack I happened to have and became a craft I trusted: the ground I stood on, the first thing I reached for in every problem after.

When you survive on a skill, you do not just keep it. You believe in it.

That belief became the foundation everything else got built on. It was also — though it would take me years and one uncomfortable whiteboard to find out — the exact thing that would one day have to change.

But that comes later. This part of the story is just the seed: a way of seeing I was born with, and the pressure that turned it into something I could build on.