My problem with exposure and why I find it hard to post
I have tried at multiple stages in my life to grow a platform online, but have never been able to follow through.
I find it hard to share what I make, whether it be on a YouTube channel or on my very own website. Usually I start off with a little spark of motivation that helps me carry out the first step, but nothing more after that. I enjoy the feeling of being productive, like having a project to chip at in the background, and making it the best it can be. But I hate coming up to the part where it’s time to share it – and so I never really do.
In this post, I’m going to be as honest as I can about why I have been neglecting this site and all my other platforms. I also intend for this to be this website’s key post that contains my goals and intentions for being here.
Why I find it hard to post
Posting anything is usually a big deal for me.
A few days ago, I uploaded a video to my YouTube channel (it looks like my first one, but trust me there are many other ones hiding under the “privated” option). It was a little animation I made that I hadn’t intended to show to anyone when I first started working on it. As long as I liked it, I was happy, and no one was going to see it anyway, right?
Halfway through the process, I got that spark of motivation to start up my YouTube channel again. Suddenly, I thought that my animation would be the perfect first video to post.
After that, I started obsessing over every little detail a lot more. Now that I’d introduced the idea of showing it to other people, I didn’t like it as much, because the way I saw it, it was no longer “mine.” I wasn’t making it for me anymore, I was making it for my (nonexistent) audience.
Finally, I got to the stage where I was happy with the animation, or more so tired of working on it. I remember saying to myself: “OK, once the colours are finished, there is no way I’m adding shading and a background. That would take way too long.” …you can guess what I added after that?
But then I realised something: at the end of the day, no matter how perfect it looked, it was always going to be just 2 seconds long. So when I came around to editing it, I went for a more humble iMovie style, as I didn’t want to over-hype such a short animation.
My first attempt at posting the video was on a channel that no one even knew I had. I was still nervous. I wasn’t confident in the animation at all and even found it kind of stupid. I was, in effect, purposefully hiding the video from everyone. So what happened was only logical. The video got 0 views from anyone but me. I took it down a day later. But not for that reason.
I couldn’t ignore the feeling that I was already trying to be someone I wasn’t. I’m NOT a minimalist editor. I enjoy the editing process a lot, and ever since I learned how, I’ve always dreamed about going a bit over the top with my videos.
Then I understood that even if a 2 seconds long animation doesn’t “deserve” to be hyped up with high quality edits and a built-in behind-the-scenes look, that’s at least more what I would do. Keep in mind that all I mean by “high quality edits” is that I used Filmora Wondershare instead of iMovie. But that’s probably just me again trying to downplay my work.
The most important change this time around, though, was that I decided to post the video on my main channel, which at least one person knew about.
This was all a step in the right direction. Now that I’d made something I somewhat liked, it didn’t matter to me as much the amount of views it got. So I uploaded it. And guess what? The views part was no different, except for one thing: it had a like and a comment from my brother. For me, who shares about 2% of the stuff I actually make, that was an accomplishment.
So to answer the question, Why do I find it hard to post? The main thing is that I don’t like my work, at least when I make it with other people in mind. But I know that I’m going to have to work on this if I ever want to get something more out of my projects. And that brings me to the question, What do I want out of this?
Why I post
I made this website a few months ago in 2024. It was originally titled Adventure Savy, and apart from the fact that having a personal website is just cool, I made it because I wanted to share bits of my life and document my progress in achieving the goals I had at the time.
Today, things are a slightly different. Instead of exclusively sharing my thoughts, I want to share bits of my projects. It’s less a website for me, and more a website for my work, which is anything from drawing and animating to writing and coding, to anything else I discover along the way.
I’m still asking myself what I really want out of this, if anything. I mainly just post and if people find it, they find it, and if they don’t, they don’t. I don’t put any effort into that actually happening, because I’m scared of that happening.
I’ve always done the bare minimum when it comes to growing a platform online. I post the thing, and I leave. I don’t want to show it to anyone. I don’t want to promote it. I don’t want to bring attention to something I’m not sure others will like. Otherwise that would mean some kind of commitment, and I’m not a fan of commitments. I prefer for exposure to happen “organically”.
I was going to say that on certain websites, blowing up out of no where can happen, and that it has happened to me, but now I’m thinking that actually isn’t true.
If you didn’t know, I have accounts on a few websites where I share my pixel art. While the main website I use is no where close to the popularity of YouTube for example, and there is even a tab for most recent posts to discover new people on, you will rarely post something and have it blow up without any further effort, even if what you make is a work of art.
I’ve rejoined these websites many times as completely different users, but every time I start again, I’m confident that I can easily earn back my following. Why? Because one of the first steps I take besides uploading some of my work, is comment on other people’s work.
I’m not saying I follow people just for the sake of getting them to follow me back, but engaging with the community like that is the only way I’ve been able to find my place on the website again and again. It acts as a method of indirect advertising that works every single time, yet it’s a crucial step that I neglect on every other one of my platforms; my more “serious” platforms.
Admittedly, when you do this, you are going to grow the circle of people around you and thus the amount of expectations for you: how much you upload, the quality of what you upload, maintaining the connections you’ve made with others and commenting on their work as much as they comment on yours. Like I feared, it does appear to become some kind of commitment (though nothing really is, as long as you have the courage to quit), but to survive that, you have to enjoy what you do. And if you do, what reason would you have to quit other than being overwhelmed and out of your comfort zone?
I’m not often proud of what I make, in the sense that I would go around and show it to everyone and not care what they say because I think it’s nice and that’s all that matters – like showing photos of my cat. I usually feel another kind of proud, like I love that one novel wrote or the fan art I made for it on Procreate, but does that mean I would ever show it to anyone even if my life depended on it? No way. But that prompts the idea that… maybe I should anyway.
Final thoughts
There’s a decision I’m hiding from. Once I figure out my why – why I want people to read what I write, and watch what I make – then I could either take the quiet route, where I continue posting like this and let it reach people organically (which almost definitely won’t happen, at least for a very very long time), or I could get my work out there in the way I know I could if I really wanted to… and I don’t know if I do yet.
I hope I’ll be able to update you soon, but know that if I do decide to do something more with this website, I have a lot of exciting things planned!
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