What are you discouraged about?
Programming is like swimming to me, we can take all the courses we want about it and take some lessons, discuss it all we want, read about swimming all we want, the only thing that builds the real comfort is the hours spent doing it.
The only thing a real developer ever knows is how little he knows. All he ever works on is his problem solving and ability to figure things out the best way possible. He does this through learning as many approaches as possible and then making it happen through the syntax of a few languages.
Start hacking, start building. The more you create, the more you'll see the patterns inherent in most if not all problems.
There is a fantastic post or two about managing your relationship with failure.
First:
http://weblog.raganwald.com/2005/01/what-ive-learned-from-failure.html
Second is one article that I think is something every programmer should read.
Embracing Failure by Eugene Wallingford:
A while back, I clipped this quote from a university publication, figuring it would decorate a blog entry some day:
The thing about a liberal arts education ... is it prepares you to fail successfully and learn from that failure. ... You will all fail. That's OK.
-- Jim Linahon
Linahon is an alumnus of our school who works in the music industry. He gave a talk on campus for students aspiring to careers in the industry, the theme of which was, "Learn to fail. It happens"
More recently, I ran across this as the solution to a word puzzle in our local paper:
You've got to jump off cliffs all the time and build your wings on the way down.
-- Ray Bradbury
Rich talked about how hard our discipline must feel to beginners, because it is a discipline learned almost wholly by failure. Learning to program can seem like nothing more than an uninterrupted sequence failures: syntax errors, logic errors, boundary cases, ugly interface, .... I'm not a novice any more, but I still feel the constant drip of failure whenever I work on a piece of code I don't already understand well.
The thing is, I kinda like that feeling -- the challenge of scaling a mountain of code. My friends who program can at least say that they don't mind it, and the best among them seem to thrive in such an environment. I think that's part of what separates programmers from less disturbed people.