

The next stage of the journey was trying to find a way of using Vim outside of a terminal. I'm really happy with the "final result". I spent an afternoon (on a week day) browsing in github repositories looking for vimrc configs. FZF it's best thing ever, it's the only plugin that I would consider essential (even though Vim has a search feature already). But there was still one thing I wanted and that was a good fuzzy finder, and my friend google had the answer for that, fzf. I found a post about Vim that had a phrase that stuck with me "let sublime be sublime, let Vim be Vim", that was enough to convince me to not try and make Vim behave like Sublime text. The plugin hunting didn't last very long. It turns out that it was way more entertaining than I was expecting. It started out like a nice hobby, every few days I would open up a file, tried to move things around, delete stuff, learn a new command or something and it was nice until I said "Guess it's time to make my own vimrc". I started learning Vim in october because apparently I had nothing better to do. Okay Ben, but I'm gonna tell you the whole story.
