Before I ever studied IT, I didn’t see myself as a technical person. My background was in Mass Communication, where most of my focus was on digital media and content. But while working with online content, I kept wondering how websites were actually built and managed behind the scenes.
That curiosity is what led me to create my first-ever website.
It wasn’t anything complex, just a simple page built using basic XHTML and CSS. But it was the first time I moved from just consuming content to actually creating something. I remember experimenting with layouts, changing colors, and trying to understand why things looked the way they did in the browser. At the same time, I was also using the platform to share my creative writing, publishing fictional stories and personal pieces, which made the process feel more real and engaging.
At the time, I didn’t have a structured roadmap. I was learning by watching tutorials, reading online guides, and testing things out on my own. I started working with WordPress and other content management systems, which helped me understand how websites are built, managed, and deployed.
What made the biggest difference was the trial-and-error process. I broke things constantly. Layouts wouldn’t align, styles wouldn’t apply, and sometimes the page just wouldn’t load the way I expected. But each mistake forced me to search, learn, and try again.
Looking back, building that first website changed how I approached learning. It showed me that real understanding doesn’t come from just reading or watching, it comes from doing. That mindset stayed with me and later shaped how I approached IT, especially when working with systems, networks, and troubleshooting.
It didn’t start as a career plan. It started with curiosity, and that curiosity ended up shaping everything that came after.