What creating outside of work has taught me: About creativity, ego, and why results are overrated

For a long time, I thought my job should be enough.

Enough creativity.
Enough fulfillment.
Enough meaning.

Spoiler: it wasn’t.

So I started creating things outside of work.
Not randomly. Not “just for fun.”

 I built my audiovisual production company with the idea of freelancing and eventually living from it.

I started my childfree project with the same goal: more freedom, more autonomy, something truly mine.

What I didn’t expect was realizing that maybe this isn’t the moment yet and that wanting to keep growing professionally, learning from other people and companies, is not a failure. It’s a conscious choice.

This is what creating outside of work has actually taught me.


1. Creative freedom hits different when no one is paying you

There is something deeply uncomfortable—and deeply freeing—about creating when no one is waiting for the result.

No client brief.
No deadline.
No approval chain.

Just you, your idea, and that little voice asking: “Is this even good?”

When I create outside of work, I get to:

Choose the topic

Choose the format

Choose the tone

Choose when to stop (or not)

And that freedom? It’s addictive.

But it’s also scary. Because when something fails, there’s no one else to blame. No “the client didn’t want that.” No “it wasn’t aligned with the strategy.”

It’s just you. And your taste.

Creative freedom teaches you responsibility. And that’s a lesson no corporate job really prepares you for.


2. Patience is not optional (unfortunately)

If there’s one thing personal projects outside work will force you to learn, it’s patience.

You don’t get instant feedback.
You don’t get guaranteed results.
You definitely don’t get linear growth.

I’ve had moments where I felt genuinely excited about something I created…
And then watched it reach basically no one.

No likes.
No comments.
No magical “algorithm moment.”

And that can be brutal.

Especially when you’re used to work where effort is at least acknowledged in some way. Even a bad project still gets a meeting.

Personal projects don’t owe you anything.

They teach you to:

Detach effort from outcome

Keep going without applause

Decide whether you’re creating for validation or for yourself

Uncomfortable? Yes.
Useful? Absolutely.


3. Impostor syndrome shows up loud—and uninvited

Let’s talk about the elephant in the room: impostor syndrome.

With my production company, it hit me hard.

There were (and still are) moments when I think:

“Do I really know enough?”

“Who am I to offer this?”

“Everyone else seems more experienced / confident / visible.”

And yet… every time I finish a project, every time someone gives positive feedback, something interesting happens.

The impostor voice gets quieter.

Not because it disappears forever—but because results have a way of grounding you in reality.

Creating outside of work taught me this:

Confidence doesn’t come before doing.
Confidence comes after seeing what you’re capable of.

And you don’t get that without shipping.


4. Not every good idea needs to become a startup

This one was a hard pill to swallow.

The childfree community started with a big idea: an app to help childfree people make friends (not date, just connect).

Sounds great, right?

Reality check:

Technically complex

Time-consuming

Emotionally demanding

Hard to sustain without serious resources

At some point, I had to admit: this doesn’t fit my current life.

And that realization didn’t mean failure. It meant maturity.

Now, that project exists in a different form:

Funny TikTok videos

Relatable content

Zero pressure to “scale”

It’s a hobby. And that’s okay.

Creating outside of work taught me that:

Not everything needs to be monetized, optimized, or turned into a business.

Some things can just exist because you enjoy them.


5. The internet rewards nonsense (and that’s annoying)

Let’s be honest for a second.

It’s frustrating to see:

Silly, low-effort videos go viral

Thoughtful, well-made content struggle for attention

I’ve felt that resentment. The “what’s the point?” energy.

Especially when you care about depth, nuance, and meaningful conversations.

But here’s the uncomfortable truth I learned:

The algorithm doesn’t reward importance

It rewards attention

And fighting that reality only drains your energy.

So instead of getting bitter, I had to ask myself:

Do I want reach, or do I want resonance?

Do I want to entertain, educate, or express?

There’s no wrong answer. But clarity matters.


6. Personal projects sharpen your professional focus

This part surprised me the most.

Creating outside of work didn’t distract me from my career—it clarified it.

Through these side projects, I realized:

What I enjoy doing vs. what drains me

Where I want to grow professionally

What skills I actually want to deepen

Ironically, all this experimentation pushed me to take my Product Marketing (PMM) career more seriously.

Not because side projects failed—but because they showed me where my energy is best invested right now.

Personal projects don’t always lead you away from your job.
Sometimes, they lead you back to it—with more intention.

That’s real career growth.


7. Creating outside work reminds you that you are more than your job

This might be the most important lesson of all.

When your only creative output lives inside your job, your identity gets fragile.

Bad feedback feels personal.
A boring project feels existential.
A career plateau feels like you are stuck.

Creating outside of work builds a buffer.

It reminds you that:

You can make things without permission

You have ideas beyond your role

Your value isn’t limited to your job title

And honestly? That’s powerful.


Final thoughts: create anyway

Will you always feel motivated? No.
Will results come fast? Probably not.
Will impostor syndrome disappear? Don’t count on it.

But creating outside of work will:

Stretch you

Ground you

Annoy you

Teach you

And sometimes, that’s exactly what you need.

So if you’re feeling stuck, uninspired, or creatively bored:

Don’t wait for the perfect idea.
Don’t wait for validation.
Just create something small. And see what it teaches you.

You might be surprised.


If this resonated with you, take this as your sign to create one thing outside of work this month.
No strategy. No pressure. Just curiosity.

And if you do, I’d love to hear what it is.


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