The moment I decided to start my career was the moment I stopped looking for a creator who looked like me and realized I had to become that creator. Let’s go back to the beginning. My first social media content was not a masterpiece. It wasn't viral. In fact, it barely cracked 50 views.
Why? Because it broke the seal. The anxiety of posting for the first time is paralyzing. You fear judgment, cancellation, or worse—indifference. By publishing that messy 47-second clip, I proved to myself that the world would not end if I failed. The ground didn't swallow me up. I simply went to bed, woke up, and did it again. Having one video doesn't make a career. Having ten doesn't either. A career starts when you move from sporadic posting to systematic creation.
And when you do, tag me. Because I was you once, and I am cheering for you. onlyfans babesafreak my first bbg
I committed to 30 days of posting. One Reel. One Tweet. One TikTok. Every single day. Did I run out of ideas? Yes, by day 4. But constraint breeds creativity. I started vlogging my grocery runs, ranting about bad movie sequels, and doing "Get Ready With Me" videos even though I was just going to the pharmacy.
I posted a reaction video to a ridiculous life hack I saw online. It was 15 seconds long. I rolled my eyes, said "Absolutely not, babesafreak out," and threw my hands up. The moment I decided to start my career
And that, more than any viral hit or brand deal, is the real career I built. The best time to start your career was five years ago. The second best time is right now. Go open that app. Hit record. Make a mess. Make a masterpiece.
But here is the critical lesson: The week after that video, I felt immense pressure. "How do I top this?" I tried to replicate the magic. I failed. My views dropped. I panicked. It wasn't viral
It is easy to look back and call that content "bad." But here is the truth: