January 30th, 2026
I Have the Urge to Build. No Idea What Though
If you’ve ever felt this, you’re not alone.
Builders be like: can literally code anything.
Also builders: …but what tho?
And honestly? With AI, this problem has only gotten worse.
Building used to be the hard part. Now it’s the easy part. You can spin up a full app in minutes. Backend, frontend, auth, payments; done. Anything is technically possible.
And somehow, that makes things harder.
Because when everything is possible, the real question becomes unavoidable: what’s actually worth building? What deserves your time, and attention? That’s the part thats hard to get clarity on. Not implementation, intention.
A reliable way to cut through this is to stop looking for “ideas” and start paying attention to friction.
Notice what repeatedly annoys you in your daily work or life. The small things you workaround. The tools you tolerate. Persistent friction is rarely random; it’s often a signal that a real problem exists, and that it hasn’t been solved well yet.
You don’t need a world-changing vision to start. You don’t need a perfectly articulated startup thesis. You just need to notice the moments where you think, there has to be a better way, and take that thought seriously. It doesn’t even need to be a startup idea, building for yourself is enough.
The best things to build usually aren’t hiding in a brainstorm doc.
They’re hiding in the stuff that annoys you every single day.