Remember I'm doing a personal challenge this year? It's all around my inner critic and finding calmness again while being content with steady progress, even tiny steps. To be frank, the first half of the year was rather packed and exciting. Not the easiest moment to find calm in everything, so what better time to do this challenge than this year?
What happened?
Career-wise, I started a new job and also switched roles by doing so. As a security engineer, I'm now fully focusing on product security and all that comes with it. You could say I'm still a specialized generalist also in this field, yet that's food for thought for a dedicated post.
Starting out at my current company was challenging in different ways than I expected. Over six months in, I can now share I definitely made the right choice when picking this role, company and team. I really enjoy my time there and the impact we can have together. At this place, I can go at a sustainable pace (and am even encouraged to do so). I can contribute using the knowledge, skills, and network I've built over many years. At the same time, I can learn so much more in an area that intrigues me every day.
I love my new position as a security engineer. I found that it's both very similar to my past roles (e.g. with regards to building value in from the start, affecting change, fostering a collaborative learning culture, the holistic technical system knowledge, a whole variety of things to learn and do) - and it's also very different (now I'm focusing on security as one main quality aspect, and I'm in a central enabler team which brings different opportunities and challenges to face).
My team is just awesome. In the past, I've never joined a team where I encountered such maturity, accountability, and reliability in my team mates right from the start. We've grown into a real team in no time, and continue to find better ways to work together with each other and the engineering teams we support. Things like prioritization of the highest value initiatives, balancing reactive and proactive work, increasing resilience through sharing work, providing sounding boards and pairing. We even had first ensemble sessions. The usual, and yet from a different perspective.
The company keeps surprising me in very positive ways, especially when it comes to upper leadership and acknowledging both achievements and shortcomings, plus their own accountability in this. Taking concrete actions to find better ways. Mind me, this is not taken for granted at all. Also, I do appreciate the culture that's currently in place and keeps evolving. Yes, there's room for improvement (wouldn't it be boring if not?), and yet: when it comes to working with the other engineering teams I've encountered folks being genuinely open to exchange insights and learn from each other. This makes it so much easier for everyone to make informed decisions together on what is feasible and worth doing to increase our product's security posture.
Personally, I love that I worked on a variety of topics already. They went from improving the ease of vulnerability scanning, to security reviews and threat models, to assessing third party tools to integrate into our product. From investigating infrastructure alerts, to alert teams ourselves of new vulnerabilities discovered, to joining incident investigations. Discussing risk, thinking ahead on scaling and enabling teams. And many more. Well, there are lots of topics worth sharing and I'm going to see what I'll mold into future content.
That wasn't it, though.
Not by far. There are also the community things I'm pursuing next to work. Here's what I focused on during the first half of the year.
- I'm co-organizing the Open Security Conference for the second year in a row. We've had to find ourselves in our new organizer team, and had quite some prep work to do. We're currently in the hot phase - registration is open, and the last operational bits need to get done to set things up for success. It's looking good though, and I'm really getting excited! By the way, we're looking for further sponsors to get the price down for everyone. In case you're interested or know companies who would, please reach out. We'd be truly grateful for your support!
- The leadership workshop series that I co-facilitated with Shiva Krishnan for a first community cohort is now finally finished. Phew, that was some kind of a ride! It took us over a year, yet it's done and we've learned a ton. We were glad to hear from our cohort that this series was really valuable for them. It'll need further reflection how to move on in the future. For the current cohort format, we had heavily underestimated the difference between doing such things with colleagues at work or with community folks next to work, where personal schedules play an even bigger role. But we made it! At least for this year, this topic is actually concluded.
- As a leisure side project, I'm still working on the security card game with my fellow co-conspirators. Slowly but steadily for real. The last SoCraTes really encouraged us to keep going. Good thing here is, while it still needs time investment, it's constrained and highly flexible, without imposed pressure.
- I've started my first capture the flag (CTF) team for real. We participated in our first CTF this year and it was a blast. We keep meeting regularly for practice, and looking out for further intriguing CTFs we can tackle together. I've learned a lot already through this fun deliberate practice setup, including that I still have a long way to go. These challenges can be super frustrating. "Easy" labels got a whole new meaning here - it really depends on what you're already familiar with and what not, and how much is in your "go to" list of things to try based on experience. And yet, they're so worth it. I love that this team is very collaborative, really tackling challenges together which makes it special to me.
- That not being enough, I've joined my second CTF group after SoCraTes. It's not really a team to take on CTFs together, yet people are regularly coming together online to try their hands on practice machines and help each other as they go. This is another interesting opportunity for me. I've already seen it help me hold myself more accountable to practice during the agreed time even if no one else is online.
- Of course there's not only the "calm" part of my personal challenge this year, there's also the "steady" part. Meaning, I'm working actively on learning topics. I've started with a variety of things and realized that while variety is nice when you just want to follow your energy, I need more focus to perceive progress as it's very small each day. Right now, I've reduced my options to mostly the CTF hands-on practice opportunities I described above and reading books. I'm moving very slowly yet steadily, while trying to keep my inner critic at bay. No matter how fast others consume such books (like, over a weekend, while it takes me months). On some days that's easier than on others!
- As I've done over many years, I'm still having both regular and on demand calls with community folks to exchange knowledge, ideas, and inspiration. Granted, they do cost time and yet they are a valuable investment into fostering my network and learning through serendipity. The good thing, more often than not, I'm regaining energy from such check-ins. They make me realize time and time again why I'm doing what I'm doing.
- Conference season is starting in fall this year for me. I've paused things for the first half due to changing jobs. Every time I do so, I first have to figure out what's okay when it comes to speaking engagements and the off time that comes with it. I'm ever so grateful for my truly supportive and encouraging manager here! Again, not taken for granted. It makes it so much easier, though. So yeah, conference season starts in fall which also means preparation takes place before. Even though I'm giving sessions that I already gave last year, I still need to invest effort to arrange things. I have four conference speaking engagements lined up for the rest of the year (plus my own conference of course). At Agile Testing Days, I'm also co-chairing the brand-new security testing deep dive track. Enough to keep me busy for the rest of the year!
- Last, definitely not least: Physical health is keeping me pretty busy as well next to my mental challenge. Fortunately, nothing too bad so far, yet stuff that has built up over many years is now cashing in. It's more than enough that I needed to prioritize this and deliberately work on a few areas in a more focused way. The bad news is that this is also consuming lots of time and energy, while at the same time I clearly need more rest and sleep. The good news is that this effort is perceivably paying off (slowly, very slowly - I'm needing lots of patience).
The Challenge of No, Not Now, Not Anymore, Just No
I realized a few things that would help me on my journey of struggling less. And most of these came rather quick and easy, like "I'm okay with only making little progress with my challenge topics". I was surprised how easy. Or being okay with balancing out my working hours every week. Others were fine too, like documenting influences on my health and indicators of calm. I was okay to document all the activities I'm doing, how much time I spend on them, and what I want to do differently in the future. I even managed to actually make some of these changes (at least temporarily). Yet then I struggled massively. I knew I couldn't go on doing everything, I had to cut things. Yet which? I had already cut them to only things I really want to do.
That made me realize, even though I'm saying "no" to lots of things already, I've accumulated way too many things that I've said "yes" to in the past and then just never let go. And I still say "yes" to new things as well. That simply doesn't add up, given I still have the same amount of hours every day that I can use to a highly variable degree that's different every day. So I tried coming up with a rather short list of things that are truly important to me as of now, and focus on those. Worked for a short while. This way, I even came up with yet a shorter list of things I claimed to be the main recipe to joy and calmness while learning! And then a very stressful period of six weeks followed, and I threw everything overboard. Maybe it truly is the recipe for me - and still I might not listen to it. So I created yet another new list of the things I'd like to transition my focus to. Plus a new version of my recipe, as you do.
And yet, nearly every week feels like a puzzle to solve, another round of Tetris (for the record, I hate Tetris), a house of cards that might collapse any moment an interruption occurs. It doesn't feel sustainable. At least not yet. Too often, it feels more like pressing on to make everything happen without stopping to think. Which also means, it's harder to celebrate achievements and enjoy the little moments for longer. It's harder to keep up my energy - even though I know I can do a lot if I have the energy.
One thing that did help me so far was pressing the pause button on blogging. It truly hurt and at the same time was a relief. Something simply had to go. Even though I wanted to take time to reflect on things publicly, I reduced it to my private space only. I still kept journaling throughout the year, and it paid off heavily so far. Not only to get some thoughts out of my head and documented for my future self, but also to see in hindsight how things actually progressed. All that, while only spending a few minutes per day on it, which is a huge difference compared to doing this more publicly on a blog or just social media, even when keeping things informal. What helped with this temporary decision was that I noticed I had stopped one thing for a whole while now, mostly related to my former work situation: posting public notes on social media on what happened day by day, what I learned, the experiments tried and insights gained. I simply didn't have the capacity and energy for it. My conscious decision to pause blogging for now was indeed a good one for the last months. Only these days are now starting to be way less hectic with more time to sit down and write about what's moving me. Let's see what happens.
There's more to cut, and cut for real. Probably a lot. Ruthlessly. To regain focus, headspace, and slack. Very tricky challenge for me. So this is by far not solved. Instead, I only became even more acutely aware of the issue. I do indeed spread myself too thin. I rush from one thing to the other, one due date to the next. It's a hamster wheel that keeps me from thinking. Yet calm thoughtful focus is what would help me most. Let alone that I also want to start (or re-start) other endeavors which do need time investment. More to think about.
So, probably the hardest thing that I'm still working on is shifting my priorities in how I (want to) spend my time. Haven't figured that one out yet. And as of today, that's strangely okay and not okay at the same time, and I still don't know what to do with it.
The Importance of Being Joyful
Speaking of slack. I really want to cut myself more slack. And I really keep struggling doing so. Slack for pure joy topics, like playing computer games. It's one of these things I truly do just for myself, no one else. In the last half year, whenever I had lots of tasks to do in front of me (like, every day), and yet I said "I don't care, I'll play a game first", that day was a good day. Preponing play before work seemed to somehow really wake me up, calibrate my brain and enable me to think. Any work I've done afterwards was way more effective than on other days. And these days felt good. I've found myself a new mantra this way: "Play first, work later". On bad days, it's still hard to unlearn the former "business before pleasure" indoctrination I grew up with. It just meant for me that play never comes as work never ends. I'm still optimistic that finally I can rewire my brain and replace this with the new narrative that works a lot better for me at this moment in time.
Another realization I've had was that I reserved "joy" for only those "pure personal joy without any other purpose" things. Like playing computer games as mentioned. Or... well, what else? Lots of other things also bring me joy, yet "they don't count" for my brain. Like enjoying a really nice cup of tea. Several times a day! So many different flavors! I could go on endlessly on how much joy this brings me as I absolutely adore tea, and it's my perfect example of finding lots of joy in the little things. Or how about reading fiction when already in bed? Yes, brings joy, yet nah doesn't count, that's just a normal thing I'm doing anyways. Nothing special. But that applies to lots of examples. Like watching an episode of a TV show during dinner. Or just taking a few conscious breaths of outside air. Or loving the rewarding payout of exercise (heck, even the time while I'm exercising). Or meeting friends I truly enjoy spending time with. Or when I realize I learned something new, that moment it clicked when another piece of the puzzle found its place. Why do I never count any of these as joy while they clearly are very joyful?
Paying Off Plenty
Overall, the last months were a lot. Surprisingly or not, my calm and steady journey pays off. Not because I was always as calm as I wanted to be, or as content with very small progress as I'd love to be. But because I listened a lot closer to my own needs, to my own wishes, to my brain and my body. I keep observing more what's going on with me in each moment and what makes me respond in which way. I become aware on further things that impact me in certain ways. Through journaling, I realized that my inner critic got rarely loud and noisy this year which is great news, as this would render it useless. Only sometimes it did alert me to something that was actually a valid concern. Like at times when I realized I indeed don't know enough on a certain subject, or when I haven't invested enough time into honing a skill while others clearly had. The rest of the time, my inner critic was actually quite calm. It's almost as if trusting my inner critic to have something valuable to say, actually calmed it down.
Calmness comes, calmness goes, and then it comes again. I can trust that the phases when I'm not calm (like, literally last week when my mind once again ran wild fearing nothing's going to work out) are indeed just that, phases. Usually, it's because I lack clarity or structure, or feel overwhelmed when too many things need my attention at once. When that happens, my ability to think degrades and I spend more and more time on just managing that. Once I get through this period, e.g. by getting all my thoughts written down before me were I can see them clearly, then bringing structure to them so I can tackle one by one and hence get things done (even if slowly) - then I'm riding the calmness wave again. And things feel good. What helps here immensely, is that my work environment really calmed down thanks to having switched jobs. Now for the rest, it's mostly my own brain and body. I can work with that.
My plans for the rest of the year? Continue this challenge. Create content. And contribute to conferences. Lots of C's, as it happens. But not without the main ingredient for everything: calm.
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