This post hit right in the feels 🥹❤️ Thank you, Aisha Nama, for being the soul and spark of TinkerHub DCS CUSAT this past year. You didn’t just lead — you lifted. Lifted people, lifted dreams, lifted possibilities. ✨ From empowering quiet creators like us to pushing to show up, speak up, and build boldly — your chapter wasn’t just impactful, it was unforgettable. 🌸 We’re endlessly proud to be part of this community you helped shape — one filled with support, creativity, wild ideas, and so much heart. Here’s to every workshop, every sleepless hackathon night, every "can I really do this?" moment turned into a loud, resounding "YES." 🛠💻🎤 The pen may be changing hands, but the story you helped write will echo through every build and brainstorm to come. 💫 If you think someone else should do it — maybe that someone is you. Apply to be the next Campus Lead - https://bit.ly/thcampus25 Not because it’s easy — but because it’s worth it. For the growth. For the chaos. For the people. For the magic. 🔥 With gratitude, love, and so much admiration — Team TinkerHub DCS CUSAT 💡🫂 #ThankYouAisha #FromCreatorsToChangemakers #TinkerHubDCS #CUSAT #WomenInTech #BuildBelongBelieve
From Quiet Creators to Confident Makers — the wild, beautiful ride that’s been TinkerHub DCS CUSAT✨ We all have that one friend who’s secretly a creative genius but refuses to admit it. For me, that’s Majida Nasrin. She’d spend hours designing jaw-dropping posters and edits — then stash them away like they were nothing. So, the moment I became Campus Lead at TinkerHub DCS, guess who I immediately dragged (lovingly, of course 😌) into our media team? Maaji. Fast forward to Useless Projects — her very first hackathon. She built her first website, Spill the Tea. It made it to the Top 30, got featured at TinkerSpace Carnival, and people couldn’t stop talking about how good it looked. Watching her glow up as a designer — and more importantly, as a person — has been one of the most emotional full-circle moments for me. 🥹💗 And here’s the thing — she’s not the only one. This year, I’ve watched: 🛠 First-time builders chase ideas they didn’t think they were “ready” for 🌐 Students go from “what even is hosting?” to “check out my site!” 💻 GitHub accounts being created mid-workshop like it’s no big deal 🎤 Women owning the mic, the room, the moment 🤝 Hackers walk in terrified, and walk out with teammates, memories, and confidence they didn’t know they had In a space where girls in tech were barely visible, we shifted that number to almost 50%. That’s not a stat — that’s a revolution. Because this wasn’t just about events. This was about belonging. About being seen. About choosing to try anyway. TinkerHub DCS was never just a club. It was a launchpad. It was a safe space. It was where quiet dreams turned into loud wins. Where we dragged our friends in — and ended up building something we’ll never forget. 🫂💡 And now, as a new chapter starts (I’m not crying, you are. 😭), it’s bittersweet. But mostly, it’s hopeful. Because this story isn’t over — we’re just handing over the pen. If this feels like you, or someone you adore — maybe this is your sign. TinkerHub is accepting Campus Chapter applications right now. If you’ve ever felt like there’s more you want to build — for your campus, or for you — please, take the leap. The growth. The chaos. The people. It’s magic. And it changes you. 💌 🔗 Apply here: https://bit.ly/thcampus25 To every single person who showed up, built something, found their voice, or even just dared to try — Thank you for making this chapter so damn special. (PS : Amal Mehabin P, Fathima Rida PS, Muhsina Beegum, Anjana Sankar has my heart. 💖) With all the love, and always in your corner — Aisha Nama 🌷 #TinkerHub #TinkerHubDCS #WomeninTech #Hackathon #TinkHerHack #UselessProjects #Opennmic #CUSAT #Community #Gratitude
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