The hidden cost of contributing to open source
Open source is supposed to be liberating. You learn in public, collaborate with strangers, and build a reputation that compounds over time. At least, that’s the narrative. But there’s a quieter sid...

Source: DEV Community
Open source is supposed to be liberating. You learn in public, collaborate with strangers, and build a reputation that compounds over time. At least, that’s the narrative. But there’s a quieter side that almost nobody talks about. A cost that doesn’t show up in GitHub stats. A cost that lives in your head. The pressure of “build in public” “Build in public” started as a healthy movement. Share your progress. Be transparent. Help others learn. But somewhere along the way, it turned into performance. Every commit becomes a statement. Every PR becomes a reflection of your skill. Every comment feels like it's being judged. You’re no longer just fixing a bug — you’re being watched while doing it. And even if nobody is actually watching… it feels like they are. That subtle shift changes everything. Fear of being wrong — in public Making mistakes is part of engineering. But making mistakes in front of everyone is something else. What if the maintainer thinks this is dumb? What if someone poin