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In 2014, I had a vision that seemed impossible: having natural conversations with AI. People laughed at me, but I spent years systematically working toward it. I did human-computer interaction research, worked on Arabic speech recognition at MIT, joined Apple's Siri team. I was literally helping build the conversational AI we use today. I achieved my impossible goal. Then it nearly destroyed me. This is the story nobody tells you about achieving your dreams. It's about going from being the top student in Sudan to grad school at Georgia Tech, from doing groundbreaking AI research to experiencing my first bipolar manic episode and hospitalization. It's about COVID lockdown, gaming addiction as an escape from trauma, family intervention, and eventually working at Walmart while I rebuild my life from the ground up. I'm not sharing this for sympathy or validation. I'm sharing it because right now, AGI research is accelerating at an unprecedented pace, and we desperately need honest conversations about the human cost of pursuing impossible things. We need to talk about what happens after you achieve your vision, about the mental health struggles that high achievers face, and about finding your way back when everything falls apart. This isn't a sad story. It's a human one. And if you've ever felt like you were ahead of the curve until the curve became a sphere and you fell behind—this is for you. If my journey resonates with you, I'd genuinely love to hear your story. You can reach me on Twitter @taha_moji or email me directly at taha.y.merghani@gmail.com Oh, this is the reddit post remembering Felix Hill of DeepMind / 5w67b07c0h