Now I’m back to making helpful posts instead of spiritual-sounding riddles. Your audience doesn’t need your awakening. They need your consistency.
Real self-realization as a blogger: I am not the main character. My audience is.
❌ Each new version of “the real me” confused the people who actually followed the old me.
They told me to “find myself” for the blog. So I did. And he was exhausting. 😅 Blogger self-realization went wrong
❌ Selling an “inner peace course” while having a panic attack over Instagram reach? Peak irony.
We’ve all seen the posts. The ones where a blogger disappears for 3 weeks, returns with a moody black-and-white photo of a cliff, and announces they’ve discovered "their truth."
If you’re a creator, don’t mistake wandering for wisdom. Your blog isn’t your therapist. And your audience isn’t your mirror. Now I’m back to making helpful posts instead
Self-awareness without strategy is just self-obsession with a camera.
My hot take: Too many creators use “self-realization” as an excuse for zero strategy. You didn’t outgrow your niche. You stopped showing up.
When "Finding Myself" Broke My Blog
❌ Authenticity is good. Emotional dumping without a point is just a cry for engagement.
❌ Fewer comments didn’t mean I was “rising above the noise.” It meant I stopped being helpful.
“I’m stepping away to find my authentic self.” – Every blogger before disappearing for 3 months and returning with 50% less engagement. Real self-realization as a blogger: I am not
Here’s what happened when my self-realization journey went off the rails: