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Devin Gingerich's avatar

Hi Roma,

I’m so glad that you’ve started this because it’s always enlightening to see how the minds of the people I follow on social media (but don’t know personally) work outside of their published works.

I graduated with a Mechanical Engineering Technology degree in 2020 and after 2 years of it, burnt out. I pivoted to teaching (so although teaching and writing are much different, I can empathize with the salary cut) but during my second year of teaching I realized I yearned for engineering. The first seed of that realization was when I stumbled across Nuts and Bolts and read a couple excerpts from it. Since then, I’ve gotten back into the engineering field and have rekindled my love for it. I still need to read the whole book, but thank you for writing it as I feel like I’m back at what I enjoy the most and it’s in part because of you!

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Bianca's avatar

It just so happens I mentioned Nuts & Bolts in a conversation with the Mechanical Engineering chair at my Alma mater tonight. He said the topic reminded him of Henry Petroski’s books, who he had as a professor.

I’ve always enjoyed writing on a small scale, even getting an article occasionally published in SWE magazine or on a blog, etc. I’d like to write fiction that features engineers or aspiring engineers to inspire enthusiasm for the field in young people but I can’t say I’ve made progress on this goal yet. I consider that there is still time for this to happen someday.

My attitude about Imposter Syndrome has evolved over time and recently Reshma Saujani’s commencement address to Smith College has led me to re-examine whether this idea is serving a purpose for me. I was terribly insecure about my engineering capabilities early on but after 20 years of working on jet engines (surrounded by many brilliant colleagues), I’ve come to realize that it’s probably an advantage to second guess whether you’re doing things right or if you know what you’re talking about. Those who don’t doubt themselves are going to cause more problems than they solve! The main thing is to avoid letting doubts result in giving up.

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