You fixed the bug. The one that had been eating your brain for two days straight. You lean back. You want to tell someone. You look around and realize there is nobody to tell. Your family would smile and nod. Your non-dev friends would say "nice!" and immediately change the subject. Your teammates are buried in their own tickets. So you just close the tab and move on. That moment right there. That is what developer loneliness actually feels like. Not dramatic. Not a breakdown. Just a quiet win that disappears into the void because nobody around you speaks the same language. The Cruelest Irony in Tech We work in one of the most connected industries on earth. GitHub. Discord. Slack. Stack Overflow. Twitter threads at 1am. You can pull a library that someone in Finland wrote three years ago and have it running in your project in 30 seconds. And yet. A developer on devRant put it plainly: "If you are a team of one, it will be both lonely AND frustrating." That is not an edge case.…