Being Hospitalized was the Best thing for My Career

Erik Andersen
2 min readAug 18, 2020
Photo by National Cancer Institute on Unsplash

Mid-way in my college career, I broke four bones in my foot playing intramural soccer.

At the time, it sucked… hard.

I was in the hospital for several days. I couldn’t walk for months after, which meant I was stuck at home and couldn’t attend classes. There were no virtual classroom I could attend, so I relied on the textbook, notes from classmates, and the internet to complete my homework.

While difficult, this proved to be the single-most-important event in my professional career.

I pivoted from a “push” model for learning (i.e. teacher’s pushing important information my way), to a “pull” model (i.e. where I had to reach out and find what I needed).

I learned that my professors weren’t god’s on earth; all-knowing beings who were the source of all wisdom.

What I discovered instead:

  • I could actually move faster without them and learn at my own pace
  • I could dive deeper into material that I thought was interesting
  • I could find more up-to-date information and best-practices online

I pivoted from merely memorizing information to pass to a test, to actually absorbing the material and being changed by it. I credit a large part of my success today to my continuing practice of following the “pull” model for my own self-improvement.

Don’t wait for others to teach you what you need — go out into the world and find it.

There is no gatekeeper to your own success.

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Erik Andersen

Senior Software Engineer with 10+ years of experience. Also an independent coach, teacher, and public speaker. My opinions are my own