You Create Your Best Content When You Involve Your Emotions
Learn to use it
Chadwick Boseman is dead, and honestly, that’s one of the celebrity deaths that got to me because he was someone I admired. So, in my little way, this article is dedicated to him.
I was down when I heard the news, and I just wrote, and while I was writing, I realized something: My best content comes when I’m either very excited about something or unhappy.
I didn’t notice it all this while until that time. When you involve your emotions into your creative process, you bring out a side that you won’t bring out on a typical day, and that’s what your audience wants to see — vulnerability.
Human beings are just finely molded clay filled with emotions, and creating a connection with another person virtually or physically happens only when you let people have a feel of those emotions you keep locked up in you.
I don’t know if I’m the best at saying how I feel, but I try my best to do the little I can to tell people about myself through what I write.
Because I feel like someone will relate to what I’m saying, and that’s all I need to connect with the audience.
You can do it too. I’ve written several times about how generic articles waste your time. It’s true because generic content doesn’t allow you to connect with your audience.
Why was Chadwick so loved? Because he was able to connect with us through his art. Although he was reading a script, you could see the sincerity in his eyes, you could relate to what he was portraying by just sitting down in front of your screen, watching. I can’t explain it, but you could easily relate to the characters he portrayed.
Why?
He made you feel something.
And as a creative, that’s all we need to do to build trust with our audience. It’s not something I’ve mastered completely, but it’s a process.
Are you having a bad day, going through a breakup, having the best time of your life, or whatever, use that emotion to create.
You don’t need to talk about exactly what you’re going through. But you can make people feel, with stories.
Adele has done it a lot; in her previous albums, she has used her heartbreaks to create songs that people in similar situations could relate to, and those albums have given her several awards because it went beyond physical.
Art is about expression; you see musicians using their realities as their muse. Use yours too. Don’t just focus on the theoretical parts of things; actually, share your stories — make people feel — and watch your audience grow.
Thank you for reading.





