Why You Should Change Jobs—According to Jesus

I’ve finally understood why it’s better to change jobs than to ask for a raise.

These days, I was reading James Altucher’s archive of posts and I found out about the Jesus’ effect. I had already heard about the Doppler effect, the Google effect, and the Butterfly effect. But, not about Jesus’ effect.

The Jesus’ effect or just being the “carpenter’s son”

According to the Gospels, Jesus was traveling and preaching all over his home country.

In our modern day, he would be on podcast tours, giving TED talks, and running masterminds. He was creating a brand and growing a following. Literally.

His movement was getting larger and larger, with followers and haters.

Until he arrived in his hometown.

He couldn’t continue doing any of his work. There, he was only the “carpenter’s son.” His hometown was the place with the most haters.

At that point, I had already heard about that piece of advice: “Don’t ask for a raise, change jobs.” I’ve made the mistake of not following it. Shame on me!

But then I made the connection between Jesus and changing jobs

Often, the best place to grow is not where you’re at now, but somewhere else where people will value you more.

Where you are now, you’re probably the database guy or the API guy or the UI guy. That’s your perceived value. You’re just the “carpenter’s son.”

That’s why most conversations about salary raises die with a “come in 3 or 6 months” or “come after your next performance review.” You’ve reached a glass ceiling in terms of growth and how management and check-signers perceive you at work.

There are no more growth opportunities. No more salary increases. Just the same old grind until you get bored or laid off.

Often, just like Jesus, we find ourselves defined by labels, the “carpenter’s son” or whatever label you have at work, and to grow, we have to move to another place. Be like Jesus and find opportunities somewhere else where you’re valued more.

I Never Knew Kidneys Mattered—Until Dialysis Hit Close to Home

All marketing goes to hearts and lungs.

Buy sunflower oil because it’s good for your heart.

Don’t smoke. And if you buy a pack of cigarettes and it comes with a picture of damaged lungs.

But what about kidneys? I haven’t seen any ads for them.

***

“She needs blood transfusions. Sign the consent here,” I was told.

My loved one was in the ICU. After lots of blood tests, a full-body scan, and urine exams, the diagnosis: chronic kidney disease.

Two days earlier, we took her to the ER.

Her abdomen was swollen. She couldn’t hold a simple conversation. She threw up constantly. Sometimes, she couldn’t even recognize us. Her body was poisoning itself.

Her kidneys had collapsed.

It was 2020, in the middle of the bat-soup crisis. We were scared of what she had and scared that she might get that deadly thing from the hospital air. Either one could kill her. Two invisible enemies.

She got the highest priority in triage at the ER. And she didn’t spend long time there before getting into the ICU. A couple of unknown heroes stood up for her with their blood.

An internist, a urologist, and a nephrologist saw her. She wasn’t fine at all.

***

Kidneys have two main functions:

  1. Remove excess liquid from your blood.
  2. Filter waste and toxins from your blood.

High blood pressure, diabetes, and kidney infections are signs that you should look for to start taking care of your kidneys more closely.

Drink enough water, exercise, stop smoking, and avoid salt. Take care of your kidneys.

Don’t trust me. Trust the US National Institute of Health. Or talk to your doctor.

***

“My life depends on a machine now,” she told me.

My loved one was shocked after her first session of dialysis.

When your kidneys are damaged, a machine replaces them. You’re “connected” to a machine that works like your kidneys. It takes out some blood, filters it out, and puts it back in. That happens for 3 or 4 hours, three times a week. That process is called “dialysis.”

It’s like going to a gym or exercising three times a week to stay healthy for a regular person. The only difference for her? She can’t skip a day or two. There’s more at risk for her than a slim body.

She first had a small tube in her neck, then in her chest. That’s how she got connected to that machine. And later, a vascular access on her arm (a vein and an artery are connected to get more blood out). This time, she got connected with two large needles. Ouuuch! That’s painful.

Sitting for 4 hours is uncomfortable.

But that’s not the worst part after a session of dialysis. High or low blood pressure, headaches, dizziness, and tiredness. That’s the worst part.

After every session, she eats and then goes right to bed. No more mental or physical energy for anything else. The day is over.

Does her life depend on a machine? Technically, yes. But we prefer to see it as the machine giving her life. It’s not her enemy, it’s her fighting partner.

7 Reasons Why I'll Keep Writing—Even If AI Writes Faster and Better

We can’t compete with AI on speed.

AI is getting faster, better, stronger, and cheaper. In seconds, it can produce a post about almost any topic in any writing style. An essay about climate change in the style of Hemingway? AI spits it out. Beep, beep, boop!

The battle against AI-generated content is lost.

Even if one day AI writes better and faster, I’ll still write because:

  1. Writing is learning: If you want to check if you understand a subject, try writing about it.
  2. Writing is teaching: You don’t need a lecture hall to teach or share anything. Simply write about it somewhere on the internet.
  3. Writing brings clear thinking: This reason is strong enough not to outsource our writing to AI.
  4. Writing is building a time capsule: Writing is leaving breadcrumbs of what we were learning and doing. It’s leaving success clues. It’s a time capsule.
  5. Writing is free, public therapy: In 2024, I applied to FAANG and failed. Instead of ranting that hiring is broken, I decided to write about it. It was liberating.
  6. Writing is an exercise for my creative mind: After ditching my to-do lists, writing is part of my daily routine to do something for my body, mind, and spirit each day.

And more importantly, writing helped me recover from burnout last year.

Last year, I took officially my first writing class.

It was the first step toward taking my writing seriously after about five years of blogging. Writing daily was part of welcoming a sense of joy into my life after all the dissatisfaction and disengagement of burning out.

In the end, writing rescued me.

Even if AI splits the world into writers and write-nots, even if it spits words faster than I ever could, I’ll continue writing, for my health, for my joy, for myself. I’d like to be a writer.

PS: This is my answer to Ron Markley’s Medium post titled: What if one day AI writes better than you? Will you still write?.

Use AI Like We Use Calculators in Math

For 8 years, calculators are banned in math class.

We can only use calculators after we learn to do arithmetic by hand, like multiplying and dividing 2- and 3-figure numbers manually. We have to learn the procedure first.

We should use AI the same way, only after we know how to do the procedure by hand.

If you aren’t comfortable with coding yet, don’t ask AI to generate code.

If you aren’t comfortable with writing, don’t ask AI to generate any text. Instead, use it to proofread and critique your writing.

AI should be like calculators in math: a tool to make us faster if we know what we’re doing. They can’t do the thinking part for us. That’s still on us.

An Easy Mnemonic to Format Dates As Strings in C#

Is it MM or mm for months when formatting dates? Is it yyyy-MM-dd or yyyy-mm-dd?

I always forgot which one to use…until I figured out an easy mnemonic.

MM vs mm

Ask yourself: Which one represents a larger time frame? Months or minutes?

Since one month is larger than one minute, it’s M for months. An uppercase m is larger than a lowercase m. Write, anyDate.ToString("yyyy-MM-dd").

mm vs fff

Then, what is it for milliseconds? Isn’t it mm?

Now, ask yourself: Which one is faster? One minute or one millisecond?

Since one millisecond is faster, write f instead of m. Write anyDate.ToString("hh:mm:ss.fff").

Easy, peasy now!