đ§ââď¸ Why Stepping Away Can Save Your Passion Project
Hello, Hello!
Itâs been a while. About five months, actually.
During this time, life threw a few big changes my way. I am finalizing a divorce â something thatâs never easy, no matter how necessary â and not long after, I met someone new. That contrast â the pain of letting go and the hope of starting fresh â made me reflect deeply on how we deal with transition, uncertainty, and identity.
And it reminded me that career growth isnât a straight line. Neither is life.
We all go through phases where weâre not feeling at our best â when we're just trying to stay afloat, let alone aim high. But breaks arenât failure. Theyâre part of the rhythm. And sometimes, stepping away is exactly what we need to come back with more clarity, purpose, and energy.
I miss talking to you. Iâll continue sharing things with you. Hit reply and say âhiâ to me :).
â Aderson
If youâve ever found yourself exhausted, uninspired, or stuck in a side project that once lit you up â youâre not alone. As developers, coders, and creators, we love building things. Weâre wired to tinker, explore, and chase that dopamine hit of making something work. But sometimes, that passion turns into pressure. And when that happens, the very thing that brought us joy starts to drain us.
I want to talk about something we rarely give ourselves permission to do: taking a break.
The Myth of Constant Hustle
Weâre in a culture that celebrates nonstop productivity. âShipping daily,â âbuilding in public,â and âside hustle success storiesâ flood our feeds. Itâs inspiring⌠until itâs not. For many in tech, especially self-taught devs, bootcamp grads, or junior engineers trying to break into the field, thereâs this fear:
âIf I stop, Iâll fall behind.â
âIf I donât keep pushing, someone else will outpace me.â
âIf I rest, maybe Iâm not as passionate as I thought.â
But here's the truth: Burnout doesnât care how much you love what youâre building. Even the most exciting projects can become overwhelming if we never step back.
Breaks Are Not Giving Up
Letâs get one thing straight:
Taking a break is not quitting.
Stepping away is not failure.
Rest is not weakness.
Sometimes you need distance to remember why you started.
That side project youâve been grinding on nights and weekends? The open-source repo you started with excitement and now dread opening? That online course you were excited to record? Maybe itâs not dead â maybe it just needs a break.
Think of it like debugging. Sometimes, the best fix isnât to push harder â itâs to walk away, come back later, and see the problem with fresh eyes. Creative energy works the same way.
How Breaks Can Help Developers
Hereâs what taking a break can give you:
- Clarity
When youâre deep in the weeds of code, design decisions, or deadlines, itâs easy to lose sight of the big picture. A break gives you distance â and distance brings perspective. - Renewed Motivation
Sometimes the motivation doesnât come from finishing the project. It comes from missing the work. When you take space, you get to notice what still pulls at you. - Better Ideas
Have you ever solved a bug while in the shower? Or come up with a feature idea while biking or cooking? Our brains keep working in the background. Breaks tap into that unconscious creativity. - Emotional Reset
Side projects often carry emotional weight â especially if youâve tied them to your identity or future success. Stepping back can untangle that pressure and help you return with a healthier mindset. - Prevention of Burnout
You donât need to âhit the wallâ to justify rest. If you wait until burnout, recovery takes much longer. Short, intentional breaks prevent bigger crashes later.
But What If I Lose Momentum?
Itâs a fair fear. Momentum is real. But hereâs the thing: momentum built on exhaustion is fragile. What you want is sustainable momentum â and that only happens when you pair effort with rest.
You might lose a bit of speed. But youâll gain direction. And in the long run, thatâs more valuable.
Plus, breaks donât have to be forever. They donât even need to be long. You can pause for:
- a weekend
- a week
- a month
- a season
Whatever helps you step out of âdoingâ mode and into âreflectingâ mode.
Signs You Might Need a Break
Ask yourself:
- Am I still enjoying this?
- Am I doing it out of guilt, pressure, or fear?
- Have I been forcing progress even when I feel stuck?
- Is this project still aligned with my goals?
- Do I feel resentful or numb when I think about it?
If you answered yes to any of these â it might be time to pause.
What to Do During a Break
Letâs be clear: a break isnât just doing nothing (unless thatâs what you need). It can be intentional. Here are a few ideas:
- Reflect: Journal about why you started the project, what excites you, and whatâs been draining.
- Reconnect: Spend time with people. Touch grass. Remember youâre more than your GitHub contributions.
- Reassess: Ask yourself if the project still serves you. If it doesnât, itâs okay to let go.
- Refill: Do things that spark curiosity â even if theyâre unrelated to tech.
Coming Back
When youâre ready, youâll know. You might feel a small itch â an idea, a pull, a spark. You might look at your repo again and think, âHey, I kind of miss this.â
Thatâs your cue. Come back. Start small. Rebuild the rhythm. And most importantly, come back with a mindset that honors why youâre doing this in the first place â not for likes, not for clout, but because it matters to you.
Final Thoughts
To all the devs, programmers, engineers, and creators out there grinding on your next side project, I want to say this:
You are allowed to rest.
You are allowed to pause.
You are allowed to choose sustainability over speed.
A passion project should light you up, not burn you out.
So if youâre tired, take the break. The work will still be there when youâre ready. And when you return â you might just build something even better.
Key Takeaways:
- đ Taking a break is not quitting: Itâs a way to reset, reflect, and return with clarity and energy.
- đ Rest prevents burnout: Short pauses can protect your long-term motivation and mental health.
- â¤ď¸âđĽTrue passion survives distance: If a project still matters to you after time away, thatâs how you know itâs worth continuing.
Personal Updates
- âď¸ Going back to Brazil on Saturday Jun 7, 2025
- 𤡠Not much else
"Almost everything will work again if you unplug it for a few minutes⌠including you" â Anne Lamott