Oh sh*t, I think I like PHP! — @ThePrimeagen

Oh sh*t, I think I like PHP!

Author: @ThePrimeagen

Insight: There's something weirdly honest about this moment—when you grudgingly admit that something you were supposed to dislike actually works for you. PHP has a terrible reputation in programming circles. It's the language everyone jokes about, the one that supposedly teaches bad habits and shortcuts. But after banging your head against its quirks long enough, some people realize it just... gets the job done. And that's worth something. This happens everywhere outside of tech too. You swear you'll never use that tool, eat at that restaurant, or watch that show everyone loves ironically. But then one day it clicks. The thing you were defensive about actually fits your life. The embarrassment of admitting it often matters more than whether it's objectively "good." That gap between what we think we should like and what actually works for us is huge, and most of us spend energy managing it instead of just being honest. The real insight isn't about PHP at all—it's that practical value and cultural status don't always line up. Sometimes the thing that gets your work done faster, costs less, and lets you ship something real beats the thing that looks better on your resume. That's not settling. That's just knowing what you actually need versus what you thought you were supposed to want.

Source: PHP Doesn't Suck Anymore? | Prime Reacts, YouTube

When Practical Beats Prestigious

Oh sh*t, I think I like PHP!

@ThePrimeagenPHP Doesn't Suck Anymore? | Prime Reacts, YouTube

There's something weirdly honest about this moment—when you grudgingly admit that something you were supposed to dislike actually works for you. PHP has a terrible reputation in programming circles. It's the language everyone jokes about, the one that supposedly teaches bad habits and shortcuts. But after banging your head against its quirks long enough, some people realize it just... gets the job done. And that's worth something.

This happens everywhere outside of tech too. You swear you'll never use that tool, eat at that restaurant, or watch that show everyone loves ironically. But then one day it clicks. The thing you were defensive about actually fits your life. The embarrassment of admitting it often matters more than whether it's objectively "good." That gap between what we think we should like and what actually works for us is huge, and most of us spend energy managing it instead of just being honest.

The real insight isn't about PHP at all—it's that practical value and cultural status don't always line up. Sometimes the thing that gets your work done faster, costs less, and lets you ship something real beats the thing that looks better on your resume. That's not settling. That's just knowing what you actually need versus what you thought you were supposed to want.

AI generated

Comments

Sign in to leave a comment or reply to one.

Sign in

@ThePrimeagen

@ThePrimeagen is a popular Twitch streamer and YouTuber known for his engaging content focused on programming, specifically in the realm of software development. He is recognized for his tutorials, live coding sessions, and entertaining discussions within the tech community.

Graph

Related