
The hidden cost of contributing to open source
Open source is supposed to be liberating. You learn in public, collaborate with strangers, and build a reputation that compounds over time. At least, that’s the narrative. But there’s a quieter side that almost nobody talks about. A cost that doesn’t show up in GitHub stats. A cost that lives in your head. The pressure of “build in public” “Build in public” started as a healthy movement. Share your progress. Be transparent. Help others learn. But somewhere along the way, it turned into performance. Every commit becomes a statement. Every PR becomes a reflection of your skill. Every comment feels like it's being judged. You’re no longer just fixing a bug — you’re being watched while doing it. And even if nobody is actually watching… it feels like they are. That subtle shift changes everything. Fear of being wrong — in public Making mistakes is part of engineering. But making mistakes in front of everyone is something else. What if the maintainer thinks this is dumb? What if someone poin
Continue reading on Dev.to
Opens in a new tab


