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Yassin Eldeeb šŸ¦€
Yassin Eldeeb šŸ¦€

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The Dark Side of Grinding: Burnout, Balance, and Identity

šŸ§  What is happiness, really?

Ask different people, get different answers.
For some, itā€™s building. For others, itā€™s connection.
For many, itā€™s a quiet feeling of peace that sneaks up on you between chaotic moments.

But underneath it all, our emotions are deeply biological.

Happiness, fulfillment, motivation ā€” theyā€™re not random. Theyā€™re chemical.

We feel it through a balance of four key brain chemicals:

  • Dopamine: the buzz of chasing goals and progress
  • Serotonin: grounded peace, confidence, self-worth
  • Oxytocin: emotional connection, closeness, trust
  • Endorphins: physical joy, stress relief, laughter

ā€œWhen all four are in sync, we feel unstoppable. But when one takes over ā€” like the dopamine from grinding or the oxytocin from social validationā€” everything goes off-balance.ā€

This is the story of how Iā€™ve felt each of those states at the extreme ā€” and what it taught me about building a life that actually works.

šŸ’Ø Phase 1: The Rebel Dopamine Spike

During school years, I felt most alive doing all the wrong things.

Skipping school. Stealing money from parents. Smoking. Hanging out with the worst influences.

We were wild ā€” and it felt amazing.

Adrenaline. Dopamine. Brotherhood.The bond with those friends? That was oxytocin, in a weird way.

It was all toxic, sure ā€” but in the moment, it made me feel seen. Alive. Important. And thatā€™s what every kid wants.

Until I got caught.
And everything collapsed.

šŸ’» Phase 2: The Lone Builder Era

The crash triggered a transformation ā€” but not a graceful one.

My world kind of collapsed.

Parents were disappointed. I was pulled out of school, forced into homeschooling to keep me away from bad influences.

And I feltā€¦ lost. Alone. Ashamed. Like I had no one.

So I turned inward ā€” toward tech.

Not because I wanted to get rich or build cool things ā€” but because I needed something, anything, that could make me feel okay again.

ā€œCoding became my escape. My new drug. My identity.ā€

I cut off everyone. I didnā€™t just lose toxic friends ā€” I disconnected from everyone. No school. No social life. Just me, my laptop, and the grind.

And I went all in.

I got my first dev job very early soon after 2yrs of self learning to code. Then another. And another. And anotherā€¦ I climbed fast. I:

  • Built front-ends for major U.S. homeschooling platforms
  • Joined many hackathons solving real-world issues like police accountability in Chicago
  • Developed trading tools for one of the largest financial firms
  • Contributed to some of the most prominent open-source projects
  • Spoke at international conferences online and in-person
  • etcā€¦

From the outside, I looked unstoppable.

But inside? I was emotionally empty.

I was living off purely on dopamine ā€” the thrill of building, shipping, winning. But I had no calm, no connection, no physical vitality. Just fast food, code, and screen time.

ā€œI didnā€™t enjoy my life where I was ā€” not because of the work, but because the people around me didnā€™t share my energy, my goals, or my mindset. I felt like a stranger in my own world.ā€

I wasnā€™t sad. I wasnā€™t happy either. I was justā€¦ functional.

And thatā€™s sometimes the most dangerous place to be ā€” because it convinces you to stay stuck.

šŸŒ… Phase 3: Rebirth in Europe

Then, I moved to Europe.

And everything ā€” everything ā€” changed.

After years of isolation, self-imposed pressure, and emotional numbnessā€¦ I stepped into a new environment, and it felt like I could finally breathe.
For the first time in my life:

  • I had sunlight on my skin daily
  • I had real, human connection
  • I was surrounded by a different vibe ā€” people who were alive, expressive, present

And I started rebuilding myself from the ground up.

I joined a boxing gym.
Started lifting weights. I dropped 25kg of fat.

I went from extremely overweight to fit, strong, confident.

I completely cut out fast food. Cleaned up my diet.
Started fueling and training my body like an athlete.

I built up my experience with dating, flirting, romance, and intimacy ā€” stuff I never had space for in the grind years.

I learned what it means to give pleasure, to connect deeply, to be desired ā€” and to desire back, with confidence.

I trained my social skills like I trained my muscles: with intention, patience, and reps.

And slowlyā€¦ I began to love being in my own skin.

I started having fun again. Laughing. Meeting people. Building friendships that werenā€™t just social ā€” they were soul-aligned.

For the first time, happiness didnā€™t come from proving myself ā€” it came from being myself.
And chemically? My system was finally in harmony:

  • Serotonin from sunlight, fitness, and daily movement
  • Oxytocin from real friendships and emotional connection
  • Endorphins from training and sweating and pushing my body
  • Dopamine still there ā€” but no longer running the show

ā€œIt wasnā€™t a grind anymore. It was alignment.ā€

šŸ˜µā€šŸ’« But Hereā€™s Where It Gets Complicatedā€¦

For the past 9 monthsā€¦ Coding has been the least of my priorities. And Iā€™ve felt good. Really good.

But alsoā€¦ really guilty.

Because I used to love building. I used to wake up excited to create.

Now, the thought of coding for hours feelsā€¦ draining.

Like something Iā€™ve outgrown, even though it once defined me.

Which is crazy ā€” because Iā€™m full of insane ideas to build.

And Iā€™ve never been sharper ā€” mentally, physically, emotionally.

But I feel rusty. Hesitant. Unmotivated.

And maybeā€¦ Iā€™m scared.

ā€œScared that falling back in love with coding will cost me the life I fought to build. Scared that productivity will once again become a prison.ā€

šŸ”­Hereā€™s What Iā€™ve Learned

ā€œYou havenā€™t lost your passion. Youā€™ve just outgrown the reason you used to work.ā€

I used to build to survive. To feel seen. To escape. To prove something.

Now, I want to create from joy, not fear.

From expression, not validation.

I want to build something that fits the life Iā€™ve designed ā€” not replaces it.
Because one thing I know for sure:

Whatever I pour my mind and soul intoā€¦I master.

Tech.

Boxing.

Nutrition.

Social life.

Romance.

Even rebuilding my own body from scratch.

So the mission now isnā€™t to pick one.

Itā€™s to build a life where all of me gets to exist ā€” in balance.

šŸ’” The Line That Changed Everything

"Build your social life around your missionā€Š-ā€Šnot as an escape from it."

When I first read thatā€¦ I froze.
Because it hit too close.
I realized I had spent the past few months doing the opposite.
Surrounding myself with good peopleā€Š-ā€Šbut not mission-aligned ones.
Going out. Hanging out. Socializingā€¦ but drifting.
And here's the truth:
When your social life isn't aligned with your purpose, it starts to erode it. Slowly. Silently.

šŸ” Environment Shapes Everything

ā€œYou donā€™t rise to the level of your goals ā€” you fall to the level of your environment.ā€

Lately, Iā€™ve been living in Aveiro ā€” a small, slow city in Portugal.

Peaceful? Yes.
But uninspiring.
Surrounded by retired peopleā€¦ and young people with no ambition.

And when youā€™re around people with no fire,your flame dims too.

I started to feel retired. Lazy. Unmotivated.

Like I was waiting for life to happen again.

And thatā€™s when it hit me:

ā€œWhere you live isnā€™t just a location ā€” itā€™s an operating system. It rewires your habits, your energy, your identity.ā€

šŸ„Š A New Chapter ā€” Not a Reset, a Merge

Iā€™m moving againā€¦this time to the capital ā€” Lisbon.

Not to run away ā€” but to realign.

Because I donā€™t need to become someone new.

I just need to create space for all the versions of me to coexist:

  • The builder
  • The competitive boxer
  • The romantic
  • The social connector
  • The ambitious grinder
  • The calm, grounded one

ā€œYou donā€™t have to choose between the driven you, the social you, or the peaceful you. Youā€™re allowed to build a life where all of them belong."

This next move isnā€™t about escape ā€” itā€™s about integration.

A lifestyle designed to hold the balance Iā€™ve earned.

  • A co-working space full of creatives and builders at the heart of the capital
  • A boxing gym where I can keep pushing myself for competing
  • A neighborhood where energy is alive
  • Routines that support clarity, movement, and stillness
  • People who share momentum, not just moments

ā€œIf youā€™re not happy where you are ā€” move!! Youā€™re not a f*cking tree.ā€

šŸ’„ If Youā€™re In That In-Between Place Tooā€¦

Then hear this:

  • If your fire is fadingā€¦ maybe your fuel needs to change.
  • If your environment feels offā€¦ itā€™s okay to outgrow it.
  • If youā€™re split between versions of yourself ā€” donā€™t choose. Build the container that holds them all.

For me, it took stepping out of Europe ā€” back to the place where my grind began ā€” to finally connect the dots. I saw the driven, isolated version of meā€¦ and the free, expressive, connected version Iā€™d become. And I realized: I need both.

Before that, I thought Europe-me was the answer. But it turns out, neither version is complete on its own.

Balance doesnā€™t mean mediocrity. It means creating space where your ambition and your aliveness donā€™t have to compete ā€” they can coexist.

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