I Love Who I'm on A7med7edtz

One of the most common questions I get is how I managed to learn so many media formats in such a short amount of time. people often assume I learned everything simultaneously. that is not true.

What they do not see is that my interests were layered, not stacked. I spent the first years of my life familiarizing myself with basic computer literacy. learning how to use a computer, access the internet, and download things. only then did I move to shooting videos. after that came editing, then Photoshop, then motion design, then some 3D animation and modeling. eventually, I reduced everything to simple edits done only when I felt like it, before shifting my full focus to computer science.

Learning the foundations is where the real weight lies. the amount of concentration, time, and focus required during this stage is intense. you cannot rush it. If you do, you will never reach the level of someone who felt they had all the time in the world to learn properly.

Once you pass this critical stage, everything else starts to feel like practice. you already have the foundations. you already have a mental model that helps you generalize to new tools and ideas. the learning curve becomes less steep. What looks like rapid progress from the outside is often just repetition built on solid ground.

You will still face momentary difficulty when switching software or design styles. but during those phases of practice, you regain enough mental capacity and time to invest elsewhere.fFor me, that elsewhere became learning how to code.

That is how I managed multiple interests. not by chasing everything at once, but by moving forward in sequence, patiently, and with intention.