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  <title>Jon Ajinga</title>
  <subtitle>Writer, builder, curious mind. Based in Colorado.</subtitle>
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  <link href="https://jonajinga.com/"/>
  <updated>2025-02-01T00:00:00Z</updated>
  <id>https://jonajinga.com/</id>
  <author>
    <name>Jon Ajinga</name>
  </author>
  
  <entry>
    <title>On building in public and staying sane</title>
    <link href="https://jonajinga.com/blog/posts/2025-02-01-building-in-public/"/>
    <updated>2025-02-01T00:00:00Z</updated>
    <id>https://jonajinga.com/blog/posts/2025-02-01-building-in-public/</id>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>There's a version of &quot;building in public&quot; that's really just performance anxiety dressed up as transparency. You share polished updates, manufactured breakthroughs, a curated view of progress. The work looks alive, but it's staged.</p>
<p>I've been trying to do something different here.</p>
<h2>What I actually mean by it</h2>
<p>When I say I'm building in public, I mean posting the thing before I've figured out whether it's good. Writing the post before I know how it ends. Pushing the project live before it's done. Not as a strategy — just because that's when I actually have something to say.</p>
<p>The filter most of us apply — &quot;is this worth sharing?&quot; — tends to kill things before they can breathe. We optimize for completeness and end up never starting.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>The most useful thing you can share is the thing you're unsure about.</p>
</blockquote>
<h2>The uncomfortable middle</h2>
<p>The part nobody talks about: it's genuinely uncomfortable. You share something half-baked and then you have to live with it. Someone might read it. They might have thoughts. You might have been wrong.</p>
<p>That discomfort is the point. It creates accountability without requiring an audience. Even if nobody reads this, I wrote it and posted it before I was ready, and that's the practice.</p>
<h2>Staying sane about it</h2>
<p>A few things that help:</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Separate the making from the sharing.</strong> Write because you want to think. Share because others might find it useful. These are different motivations.</li>
<li><strong>Don't track metrics on your own thoughts.</strong> Page views on a personal essay are noise.</li>
<li><strong>Give yourself permission to be wrong.</strong> This isn't a press release.</li>
</ul>
<p>I don't know if this approach produces better work. But it produces more of it, and more honestly, and I think that's the thing worth optimizing for right now.</p>
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