If your financial situation allows it, I'd recommend you take some time off to recharge and reflect on what you'd want to do next. You've likely come off the hamster wheel, so to speak, and now is sorta lost. All the regular structures/incentives you relied on before is gone and there are uncertainties everywhere.
If you're not in a good financial position, stabilizing your finances would be the first priority. I would focus on developing your professional networks and reaching out to past colleagues etc for job leads/referrals. You're at a stage where you've very little to lose and everything to gain from any interaction with reality/real-world problems.
Working on AI/vibe-coding, esp understanding the fundamentals, will be advantageous as everyone is still figuring things out. Your lack of experience won't hurt you as much, since no one really have any. Be careful with using too much AI assistance for learning, as it can actually slow you down and give you a feeling of compentency/productivity without deep understanding.
my financial position is not good now. i have only this year left. i already taken time off recently i got a disease so.
i do know that i like coding and i will continue in this field only. the only thing is that like most of my internships were in frontend and two are fullstack
i tried to connect with people but i don't know if i am connecting with right people i am unable to put myself i hesitant on my skills
how to find people? in my college time most of my time went on doing works for internships trying to earn from here and there and now i don't have proper connection with anyone.
Sorry to hear that. This info does make it easier to rule out some options.
As a hiring manager, I'm usually not looking for a specific skillset from recent grads, but whether they are competent learners and have good communication skills. Both of these attributes means they can quickly adapt and more likely to contribute (or at least be less of a burden in the short run).
From your other posts, I'd recommend you work on your writing (English and your local language) to be more professional. Don't use AI writing, as you'd lose your writing "voice" and others will judge you for it.
For networking, I'd reach out to senior engineers in your area or prior companies to ask for advice on what's important to learn that you didn't learn in college. Don't ask for a job, as that could send their guards up. Follow through with their advice and update them regularly, every few weeks. The goal would be to show them you're a quick learner and can communicate well. They're more likely to recognize an opportunity and send a lead your way. It may not be with their current company, but a friend's company etc. Many jobs are shopped around informally via vetted social relationships before being shown in public.
If you're really strapped for $$, taking on any tech-adjacent job could be useful, including customer support roles where you can practice your communication skills.
If you're not in a good financial position, stabilizing your finances would be the first priority. I would focus on developing your professional networks and reaching out to past colleagues etc for job leads/referrals. You're at a stage where you've very little to lose and everything to gain from any interaction with reality/real-world problems.
Working on AI/vibe-coding, esp understanding the fundamentals, will be advantageous as everyone is still figuring things out. Your lack of experience won't hurt you as much, since no one really have any. Be careful with using too much AI assistance for learning, as it can actually slow you down and give you a feeling of compentency/productivity without deep understanding.
Good luck!