Go have fun with the web

Go have fun with the web
Photo by FONG / Unsplash

Back in the days of Geocities, I spent a lot of time hacking away on raw HTML and CSS. I enjoyed tweaking things, making it just right and experimenting with random ideas I had. I’d sketch things out, then turn them into a close(ish) version on the web. “Under construction” gifs would hide my unlinked, mad scientist HTML files.

As I grew older, the idea of “hustle” culture slowly killed out this mindset. Instead of having fun, I felt everything I do on the web had to serve a purpose. If I wasn’t building something that might make money, I was wasting my time. And guess what? In 15ish years of operating under that mindset, I’ve made maybe $500 online.

Pretty terrible investment if you ask me.

I’m willing to bet I’m not alone in this mindset, it seems embedded into the millennial DNA. We’ve grown up with stories of dot com entrepreneurs making it big while sipping Mojitos on the beaches of Chiang Mai.

You’re always just a few more late nights from quitting your job, joining NomadsList and traveling the world!

The truth is, you’d probably have a better chance winning the lottery, so why waste your time chasing the impossible? Why turn an artistic, creative outlet into a second job that doesn’t put food on the table?

Embrace the web as a hobby. Like pencils, paintbrushes and clay, the web is a way to give “physical” form to the images in your head with HTML, CSS and JavaScript. When you stop building for scale, potential customers and imagined profit, you free yourself to have fun.

Build silly, build simple and above all else, build for the sake of creativity.