Believing You Don’t Matter

Streamed on:
46

Believing you don’t matter as an artist or creator is one of the subtlest ways people give up on their own voice. It rarely looks like a dramatic exit; instead, it shows up as hesitation, self-censorship, and endless comparison to others who seem louder, more confident, or further ahead. Over time, you begin to tell yourself that your story has already been told, that your ideas aren’t original enough, or that your absence wouldn’t be noticed. That belief slowly drains the joy and urgency out of creating.

The truth is, impact is often invisible while it’s happening. Art doesn’t need to reach everyone to matter—it only needs to reach the right person at the right moment. Something you create today might sit quietly for months or years before it clicks with someone who desperately needed those words, that image, or that idea. Most creators never fully see the ripple effects of their work, but that doesn’t mean those ripples aren’t real.

Every artist who has ever mattered has wrestled with the feeling of insignificance. The difference between those who fade away and those who leave a mark is the choice to keep creating anyway. Your voice is shaped by experiences no one else has lived, and that alone makes it valuable. You don’t get to measure your worth by numbers, trends, or algorithms—your work matters because you made it, and that is reason enough to continue.

Loading comments...