PyLadiesCon 2025

Not Just Code: Building Communities That Don’t Burn People Out
2025/12/06 , Main Stream
言語: English

Open source runs on passion, but passion is not a renewable resource. This talk will explore the hidden emotional and social costs of contributing to open-source projects. From burnout to invisibility, we’ll reflect on how the very communities we depend on can unintentionally exhaust the people keeping them alive. Attendees will walk away with practical ways to support contributors, make communities more welcoming, and build open source that truly includes everyone.


Open source has revolutionized how we build software; however, it hasn’t solved the problem of how we support the people who make it possible.

Behind every feature request, GitHub issue, or Slack ping is a human being trying to balance their desire to help with their mental, emotional, and sometimes financial limits. And while we celebrate open source wins, we rarely discuss the cost of participation: burnout, loneliness, exclusion, and the pressure to be “always on.”

This talk takes a critical yet hopeful look at the human realities of contributing to and maintaining open-source projects. We’ll explore:

  • The hidden labor behind community work and code maintenance

  • How issues like burnout, gatekeeping, and lack of diversity still persist

  • Why community care should be treated as infrastructure

  • What inclusion actually looks like (beyond just opening a repo)

  • Practices that support contributor well-being without sacrificing project momentum

  • Whether you're a project lead, data scientist, contributor, or community manager, this session will help you see the people behind the pull requests and understand how to build spaces where they can thrive, not just survive.

Aishat Muibudeen is the Design Lead at the AsyncAPI Initiative, where she also serves on the Code of Conduct and Technical Steering Committees. She’s an active contributor to CHAOSS and the founder of OpenNest-Africa, a community built to make open source less intimidating and more fun, especially for folks from underrepresented backgrounds.

Her work intersects inclusive design, community care, and open-source sustainability. She’s a frequent speaker on these topics and presented her paper “Beyond the Code: How Diversity and Inclusion Shape the Future of Open Source” at the OpenForum Academy Symposium (OFA) in 2024.

Driven by a love for storytelling and systems change, Aishat believes community is just as critical as code. She's passionate about helping people feel seen, supported, and safe in tech spaces — and yes, she’s learning German too, weil Wachstum nicht am Keyboard endet.