So. I had a YouTube channel. Past tense. And before you ask, no, it wasn’t a burnout thing. It wasn’t an algorithm thing. It wasn’t even a “I ran out of ideas” thing. Life just walked in, sat down uninvited, and said, “yeah, we’re doing this instead now.”
My brother was diagnosed with type 2 respiratory failure. He spent time in the ICU. And when he was released, he came home, which meant I became his caregiver, full time, for the next nine months. No script. No cuts. Just me figuring it out day by day.
The YouTube channel? It went quiet. And I let it.
I should rewind a little. Before all of that, I was genuinely excited about the channel. I had this image in my head, the classic, scrappy YouTube dream. Just you, a camera (okay, my phone), a topic you care about, and boom: content. Pure. Unfiltered. Real.
What I didn’t fully clock at the time was how much YouTube had changed. I grew up watching people film in their bedrooms with potato-quality cameras and zero production value, and it was beloved. That rawness was the whole point. The platform was democratic. Anyone could show up.
Somewhere along the way, the bedroom became a studio. The creator became a brand. And the upload became a production.
Youtubers now have teams. Editors, thumbnail designers, SEO strategists, sound engineers. The bar for what counts as “watchable” crept up so quietly that by the time I noticed, it was already somewhere near the ceiling. I’m not complaining, a lot of it is genuinely gorgeous content. But if you’re one person with a phone and a dream, it’s a lot to walk into.
Still, I walked in.
Here’s the thing about doing something creative, even imperfectly, even briefly, you learn. Fast.
I learned about CTR. Click-through rate. The little percentage that determines whether your thumbnail and title were interesting enough to make a stranger pause their scroll for half a second. I learned about AVD (average view duration) which is basically YouTube’s way of asking: did people actually stay, or did they immediately regret clicking?
And once you understand those two numbers, the whole platform suddenly makes sense in a slightly unsettling way. Why are thumbnails always someone’s face with a shocked expression? CTR. Why do videos open with a punchy hook in the first eight seconds? AVD. Why does everything feel engineered to keep you watching? Because it is. Literally. That’s the job.
I don’t say that to be cynical. It’s just honest. Creators aren’t doing it to manipulate you, they’re doing it to survive on a platform that rewards engagement above almost everything else. Once I understood that, I stopped judging the clickbait and started respecting the craft behind it.
Now here’s the part I wasn’t expecting.
I shot everything on my phone. No ring light, no ‘fancy’ microphone, no gimbal. Just me, my phone propped up somewhere reasonable, and whatever natural light the room was offering that day. And people kept telling me, wow, the quality is really good.
I genuinely didn’t know what to do with that at first. I kept waiting for the “but.” There wasn’t one.
And then there were the comments about my voice. Turns out I have a good voice for this. Warm, apparently. Easy to listen to. A few people even said it was the reason they stayed till the end of a video, not the content, not the editing, just the voice.
You can plan a lot of things about a creative project. You cannot plan what it reveals about you.
I didn’t start the channel to discover I had a good voice. I started it to make videos. But here we are. That’s the sneaky gift inside most creative endeavours, you set out to make a thing, and somewhere in the making, you find out something about yourself that you didn’t go looking for.
The caregiving was hard. I won’t sugarcoat it. Nine months is a long time to put your own life on pause, and there were days that were genuinely, bone-deep exhausting. But my brother needed me. So that’s what I did.
The channel wasn’t the sacrifice that hurt most. It was just the one that’s easiest to write about.
What I know now is that the channel isn’t gone. It’s just… dormant. Like a draft sitting in a folder. And I’ve got something I didn’t have before, a clearer sense of what I’m actually good at, what the platform really is, and what I’d want to do differently next time.
I don’t know exactly what’s next. Maybe something with audio. Maybe video again but differently, smaller, less concerned with the algorithm, more concerned with just saying something real. Maybe both. Maybe neither.
But the voice? That I’m keeping.
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