The Path That Got You Started Is Still the Right One
The end of this channel as you know it ✌🏻
Somewhere between your first upload and your ten-thousandth analytic refresh... you forked. You didn't mean to. Nobody does. But the trail that lit your chest on fire got quietly replaced by a trail someone else drew on your map.
Peter McKinnon sat down with a Chemex, an advent calendar coffee, and five years of YouTube behind him... and said the quiet part out loud.
"I never make them because I always just kind of assume people don't want to see that."
Read that again.
A creator with millions of subscribers... still talking himself out of the ideas that genuinely excite him. Still filtering his own spark through the lens of audience expectation. Still wrestling the same beast every one of us wrestles.
The Fork Nobody Warns You About
Here's how it happens. You start creating because something inside you has to come out. A photo. A video. A weird little flashlight review nobody asked for. The work is imperfect and alive and unmistakably yours.
Then people show up. And showing up is beautiful... until their expectations start rewriting your compass.
Paralysis by analysis sets in. You're deep in analytics. Watching other creators. Comparing thumbnails. Researching trends. And every hour spent there is an hour stolen from the thing that made you magnetic in the first place... your creative authenticity.
McKinnon nailed it: "That path changes and it usually forks into a direction that doesn't help."
The fork feels productive. It looks like strategy. But it's a slow divorce from the original fire.
The Muscle Memory of Making
One of the most powerful things McKinnon dropped was his comparison of creative momentum to exercise. The more you create, the more you need to create. Ideas breed ideas. Momentum builds a flywheel that feeds itself.
But the reverse is equally true.
The more you analyze, the more you analyze. The more you hesitate, the deeper the rut of hesitation carves itself into your daily rhythm. And ruts get a bad rap... but a rut of overthinking? That one deserves every bit of it.
I think about the younglings I work with. The ones staring at blank screens. Blank applications. Blank futures. The paralysis isn't always about content calendars and subscriber counts. Sometimes it's about whether your voice even matters.
It does.
But you'll never feel that truth by thinking about it. You feel it by making something. Shipping it. Watching the universe respond... even if the response is silence. Because silence after action is still miles ahead of silence after inaction.
Charisma Over Credentials
McKinnon said something that stopped me cold:
"I don't think what made my channel successful was necessarily my abundance of skill within the realm of filmmaking and photography... I think it's the charisma and the individuality and the uniqueness that I apply to that trade craft."
This is the thing nobody teaches in any course or tutorial. Technical skill gets you in the room. But individuality... your weird, nerdy, slightly embarrassing obsessions... that's what makes people pull up a chair and stay.
It's like the difference between a perfectly constructed lightsaber and the one Luke Skywalker built himself in a cave on Tatooine. One is technically flawless. The other has a story. People follow stories.
Your quirks aren't liabilities. They're your signal cutting through the noise.
The Factory Door and the Planes
The most quietly devastating moment in the video is McKinnon describing his old job at a wood molding factory. Cracking a door near the airport. Watching planes take off. Dreaming about a life where his photos hung on someone's wall.
That wasn't strategy. That was longing. Pure, unfiltered purpose pressing against the inside of his ribs.
And now... years later... people are framing his work. Hanging it in their homes. The dream answered the dreamer.
But here's what I want you to catch. The dream didn't come true because he optimized his thumbnail click-through rate. It came true because he kept walking the path that started at that cracked factory door. The path of genuine hunger. Of showing up with what he had before anyone validated it.
Three months without food. Three days without water. Three minutes without hope. McKinnon's version? Three minutes without remembering why you started... and the algorithm starts writing your story for you.
Ship the Weird Stuff
McKinnon's resolution for 2022 was simple: make the weird stuff. The flashlight video. The meta experiments. The ideas that don't fit neatly into a niche.
"I would rather make them than be bummed that I didn't make it for whatever reason I talked myself out of."
That's not just content strategy. That's a philosophy of living. Every dream you talk yourself out of becomes a low-grade ache you carry into the next decision. And the next. Until one day you realize you've been carrying a bag full of unmade things... and it's heavier than any failure would have been.
So ship it. The weird one. The vulnerable one. The one you're convinced nobody wants.
Because the people who need it most are the ones who didn't know they were looking for it... until you had the courage to put it where they could find it.
Your path started somewhere specific. A cracked door. A first upload. A quiet whisper that said this matters. The world will offer you a thousand forks disguised as upgrades. Most of them lead away from the fire.
Stay on the path that got you started. Make the weird thing. Ship it before you can talk yourself out of it. And remember... light doesn't fight darkness. It just shows up. 💙
So show up. Quietly working. Loudly alive.
--- Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cGb-SOLiTwQ
From TIG's Notebook
Thoughts that surfaced while watching this.
I want to learn how to be the best receiver that I can ever be, because I believe that graceful receiving is one of the most wonderful gifts we can give anybody. If we receive what somebody gives us in a graceful way, we've given that person, I think, a wonderful gift. — *Mr. Fred Rogers*— TIG's Notebook — On Connection & Understanding
The two most important days in your life are the day you are born and the day you find out why. — *Mark Twain*— TIG's Notebook — On Purpose & Legacy
Don't be afraid of take two.— TIG's Notebook — On Failure & Perseverance
Echoes
Wisdom from across the constellation that resonates with this article.
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