Is It Too Late To Launch A Blog About Lifestyle?

Starting a lifestyle blog is not too late, as long as you have a unique take on the topic and avoid the online echo chambers. This guide will walk you through every step of the process, from defining your blogging niche to creating valuable and engaging content that resonates with your audience. There are many easy-to-use platforms available for starting a blog, such as WordPress, Squarespace, and Wix.

It’s never too late to start a blog, as many people start blogs later in life and have had great success. It’s important to create valuable and engaging content that resonates with your audience. There is no such thing as a right time in terms of starting a blog, but the blogging industry has become much harder to find growth and engagement.

There is no such thing as a right time in terms of starting a blog, but it is essential to make the right kind of content that resonates with your audience. There is no such thing as a right time in terms of starting a blog, but it is important to make the right kind of content that resonates with your audience.

To start a lifestyle blog, follow these 7 easy steps and 9 fundamental tips:

  1. Determine the direction of your blog or its niche.
  2. Choose a free blogging platform.
  3. Choose a theme and design your blog.

In summary, it’s never too late to start a lifestyle blog, as long as you have a unique take on the topic and stay out of the online echo chambers. With guidance and dedication, you can master the art of blogging in no time.


📹 Why It’s Not too Late to Start Over After 30

It’s been an interesting year. Big changes coming. Stay tuned. CHAPTERS 00:00 INTRO 00:44 PART I: Okay Mark, what the fuck …


Am I too old to start a blog?

The decision to establish a blog is not constrained by temporal limitations. Each individual possesses a distinctive perspective, rendering the pursuit of blogging an endeavor that can be undertaken at any stage of life. Each individual possesses a distinctive voice and a unique set of insights that are not transferable to others. Notwithstanding the plethora of existing blogs on the subject matter one is considering blogging about, none can offer the unique perspective that one can.

Is it a good idea to have a lifestyle blog?
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Is it a good idea to have a lifestyle blog?

Lifestyle blogging is a creative and lucrative way to build a personal brand around your passions. Some blogs make millions a year, while others, like A Beautiful Mess, can earn hundreds of thousands of dollars annually. To start a lifestyle blog, follow these steps:

  1. Choose a niche that you enjoy and create a content plan.
  2. Choose a blogging platform and register it.
  3. Choose a domain name and hosting service.
  4. Choose a domain name and hosting provider.
  5. Create a content strategy and create a content calendar.
  6. Promote your blog on social media and other platforms.

Are lifestyle blogs still relevant?

The food, lifestyle, and travel niches have the highest number of blogs and monthly visits. Of the 71 bloggers who identified SEO as their primary traffic source, 50 earned over $50, 000 annually, with Google as their primary traffic source.

What is the 20 year rule in fashion?

The 20-year rule refers to the fashion cycle that repeats every 20 years, with trends ranging from “love it” to “hate it” and back to “love it”. This cycle is influenced by nostalgia, but trends often first appear on people too young to have nostalgic associations. This is because every two decades, a new generation of young adults emerges, experimenting and defining their styles. They often lean towards clothing styles that feel “new” and “retro”, which leads them to watch older series and films, which provide them with a better understanding of the culture and its style. This leads to them wearing trends of the past, which is considered overshooting and not long enough.

Is it a waste of time to start a blog?

Blogging is a valuable tool for individuals and businesses to reach a wider audience. It can be a means to make money from ad revenue, enhance organic SEO strategies, establish relevance in industry trends, teach about products, build brand awareness, or share specialized knowledge. To effectively leverage your blog, it is crucial to identify your unique selling point (USP), which is the one thing that will attract people to your blog. This specific thing is what will make people come to your blog and is essential for success in any business. To reach a wider audience, it is essential to learn SEO and content marketing.

Is lifestyle blog a niche?

Lifestyle blogs are often confused about their purpose, but they can encompass various niches and topics such as travel, food, parenting, and fashion. They can be a catch-all blog niche for a wide variety of topics, such as recipes, crafts, gift guides, holiday ideas, and college tips. Successful examples include a multi-niche blog covering recipes, crafts, gift guides, and holiday ideas, and a profitable college lifestyle blog covering college tips and dorm ideas. Starting a lifestyle blog allows you to write about various topics without being limited to just one.

Why do many bloggers fail?

Blogs often fail due to a lack of proper planning and execution. Some bloggers fail due to insufficient research, inconsistent content, ineffective SEO practices, or insufficient promotion. A key reason for blog failure is a lack of a purposeful content strategy. A content strategy outlines the blog’s goals, objectives, and roadmap, aiding in understanding the audience, aligning with business objectives, allocating resources effectively, and measuring performance. By implementing a content strategy, bloggers can overcome these hurdles and achieve success in their respective fields.

Is it too late to start a fashion blog?

It is never too late to embark on a career as a fashion influencer or blogger, with the number of new accounts in this field continuing to grow. In order to generate revenue from your Instagram account, it is advisable to consider utilising platforms such as LiketoKnow. It is a matter of fact that… There are a plethora of monetization strategies for Instagram accounts with 1, 000 followers. For those uncertain about the most optimal approach, we recommend consulting the comprehensive guide, “11 Ways to Make Money on Instagram with 1, 000 Followers.”

Are blogs still a thing in 2024?

The fundamental human inclination to consume engaging and informative content persists in the contemporary era, and blogging, with a few contemporary adaptations, continues to represent an effective platform for achieving this objective.

Are blogs still profitable in 2024?

The profitability of blogging has remained consistent over the past decade, despite the advent of a vast number of blogs, now exceeding 600 million, which have contributed to increased competition. In order to secure a top spot on search engines, it is now necessary to create content of a high standard. This is evidenced by the findings of Ahrefs, which have identified over 600 million blogs on the internet.

How profitable are lifestyle blogs?
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How profitable are lifestyle blogs?

The monetization potential of lifestyle blogging is significant, with affiliate marketers in the parenting and family niche earning an average of approximately $1, 145 per month, according to affiliate marketing statistics. However, this figure is subject to variation depending on the specific sub-niche.


📹 Is It Too Late To Start?

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Is It Too Late To Launch A Blog About Lifestyle?
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Rae Fairbanks Mosher

I’m a mother, teacher, and writer who has found immense joy in the journey of motherhood. Through my blog, I share my experiences, lessons, and reflections on balancing life as a parent and a professional. My passion for teaching extends beyond the classroom as I write about the challenges and blessings of raising children. Join me as I explore the beautiful chaos of motherhood and share insights that inspire and uplift.

About me

92 comments

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  • I’m restarting at age 28. After 10 years I schooling, I finally landed my job that was paying me almost 6 figures, but I was absolutely miserable. I knew if I stayed, it would literally take years off of my life. So I quit. I’m restarting, I’m broke, I’m living with my parents, I have debt again. But I know and I truly hope in 2 years, I can come back and comment on this post and say I made the right decision.

  • What about 45?! I spent 10 years in the Army from the age of 20. Got out and spent 20 years trying to drown the haunting images of burnt bodies in the bottom of a bottle. Failed relationships, failed friendships. Now @ 45, I’m trying to get a college degree in Construction Project Management. It is difficult, daily, but the only other option is to lay down and die. We are not defined by what we do, but by the challenges we over come. Believe in yourself, your setbacks are just training exercises. Excelsior!

  • From this 57 year old woman, with kids out, and about to start a life of my own suddenly, Thank you! I’m not young anymore, I’d like to think I’m not old either, but life is changing. I’m getting to see what my next stage is, and it’s complicated and confusing. So, thinking I can start over, that’s pretty awesome. Because I think I will be starting over again.

  • Hey Mark I love your books and your YouTube website!! I’ve been doing YouTube for 5 years myself, and just remember: views and subscribers don’t mean much at the end of the day, just focus on making content that makes YOU happy, and that’s success in itself. Keep up the great work! Love everything you do! ❤️

  • I was a cook for 10 years until I finally got my first job as a head chef. I spent 6 weeks preparing for the opening night – building a team, writing the menus etc. Everything went smoothly on opening night, all of the staff were great and the customers came up to the kitchen to say how much they enjoyed the food, the local food writer even did a feature in the city’s newspaper. As soon as service was over, it hit me like a ton of bricks that I didn’t want to do it anymore. I had achieved what I wanted and had no plans for what I wanted to do afterwards. Ever since then I’ve been in a death spiral of taking meaningless kitchen job after meaningless kitchen job. Only recently I’ve decided to try something new but I have to remember that the goal always needs to change, the mountain needs to get a little bit higher every time I get closer to the top.

  • My best friend gave up too soon and took his life at 31. He was a year older than me and now I’m older than he’ll ever be. It’s a weird feeling. He was his own warden and slaver. Nothing he ever did was good enough, and at the same time he would never take less than he wanted. So eventually something had to give. Every day do try to remember not to go down the same path. He told me to take risks and to get as much as I could from life. He couldn’t do the same for himself. Anyway, losing a close friend is a sort of near death experience. It drives home the idea of mortality. So, I’ve been saying “fuck it” ever since. Sure, I wish I had been more true to myself when I was 20. Wish I had dropped the sadboi act and stopped running from my fears, but I’m not dead yet.

  • As someone who just turned 31, and had my entire 20s derailed by Severe Ulcerative Colitis and Depression (affecting my ability to focus, retain information, or even work/attend school at my worst), this is what I needed to watch. For the first time in 15 years I am medication free (all meds!) due to my resiliency and fight to find a way to heal both physical and mentally. Reading your books, learning about meditation, yoga, diet, and how to stand up to doctors all aided me in getting to where I am healthwise today over a decade+ long journey. I am finally ready to establish myself in a new career, but have been extremely hesitant and fearful lately, mainly because I feel scared of failing at 31 after not having any true career yet. perusal this has helped re-light my excitement in finding new work and struggling and failing, in order to learn and grow and succeed. I owe myself a lot of credit where were I am today, but thank you Mark for giving me the extra advice and boosts along the way, you are a true gem and I appreciate all of your work (and struggles and failures to get there!).

  • So many people in my life don’t understand doing things that you don’t have to do. Challenge and failure and learning new things gives me a high. Once I’m proficient I get bored. I won a city wide award for my business 2 years in a row now. Where do I go from here? The first time it was great. The second time, I was like meh. Glad other people get it. ❤️

  • All of this. I spent nearly two decades in Tech, building a “stable” career and a family of three with my high school sweetheart. Then in 2020, my wife passed away, and I was left to care for my three children. Since then, I’ve been unearthing what the next chapter of my life was and is, which has led me to founding a fashion company, podcast, and grief platform. At first, it was frustrating, until I realized how much joy I got from being a beginner again. Learning, experimenting, failing – rinse and repeat. I’m so excited for you! Onward and fucking upward.

  • Finished reading one of your books 2 months ago and I really enjoyed it. I’m 36 and I’m still starting over in a sense (in school for my masters; still don’t have a “career” yet) so I appreciate hearing that what I’m doing is not pointless in a sense. It could all be for nothing, but maybe not, and that “maybe” keeps me going.

  • When you talk about enjoying being bad at things, I related, hard. When I started doing debate, I was awful, and there was so much fun associated with learning, with climbing the mountain. As I reached a peak, I didn’t feel the same inspiration, I felt nervous about losing what I had. I ended up quitting, especially with college and all, and have been on my journey to find deeper sources of satisfaction again

  • Mark, you have no idea how thankful I am for this article and your current direction As I’m also learning everything about YouTube creation, hearing your perspective on both sides of the mountains made a huge impact on me. I’m incredibly excited to see what you will create with this website. As someone who read your books and articles multiple times, I have no doubt that it will resonate with all of us. You have my fullest support 🙌

  • You show off your 3 best selling books but honestly models has been most impactful for me and my relationship with myself. The dating life is still a work in progress but that book allowed me to see my accountability within that and have a waaaay healthier understanding to relationships so thank you. Models is way too underrated and I figure everyone would benefit from reading it.

  • Mark, I am a very shy person and I struggled a lot the last week with a lot of anxiety. On Friday I bought your 2nd book, The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck and it helped me a lot. I will study it and read it. Besides, I laughed a lot with your blog post about the problem or paradox of Self-Improvement. I like how you take things to weird extremes, to show us important lessons. Thanks Mark!

  • It’s always a lot easier to follow your dreams, be creative and take risks if you have a financial backing. Taking time out to reflect and looking after yourself isn’t something everyone can afford to do unfortunately. But I commend you for finding new ways to challenge yourself and not continuing on the same path only to not rock the boat. The articles are really good, especially if you do everything yourself. Not sure how much pleasure you got out of failing along the way but well done on the result 😊

  • What pisses me off about this is that Mark isn’t “starting over”. He’s producing the same stuff he’s been writing about his whole career and is starting with hundreds of thousands of viewers. This isn’t starting over; it’s expanding the market. Furthermore this comment will just be burred under hundreds of comments from big websites blowing smoke and showing support. You want to start out again? Don’t use your brand, don’t use your contacts, and try to grow a YouTube website organically on the back of the content… not your existing success.

  • I feel like a large thing that isnt mentioned here is flexibility in options. I am financially imprisoned, i cant just choose to make a direction to climb on the mountain. If i dont succeed enough i will die, ill run out of money, i wont climb high enough, ill run into problems that i dont have the training or experience to handle. And when i fail it will be the only failure needed to stop me from climbing ever again in the future, because i am broke. Im broke in a sense of having no ability to mechanize success. A lot of people have something that allows them to continue, a college degree, years of experience in some job. If all that you have in a back pocket is 1000 dollars in your bank account and 10 years of working at entry level customer service positions that pay just enough to avoid homelessness, you dont have any leverage in your life to succeed in meaningful ways. I am qualified to do more soul grinding customer service, thats all ive been doing. I find this article tone deaf in that sense. You are rich, doing article content is just a shift from one media content creation job to another, you live in a big city full of friends and family. Your articles are about your past, and if this fails then you still have everything else in your life. You are allowed to pursue because you have leverage.

  • I’m in my 30’s and I went back to college. I suck at school. I always have. But I love it, I love learning. It just doesn’t love me back. I have epilepsy and my short term memory is cashed. I’m surrounded by young adults that accidentally get A’s while I struggle for C’s. All of the extra work I have had to put in through the years has paid off…I remember valuable information from those classes a decade ago because I suck so bad at memorizing I had to study for hours, I recorded my voice asking test questions so I could answer myself while I was driving, and I kept every color-coded 4×6 and all of my notebooks. I sucked when I was in college the first time, but that was one of the happiest times of my life. I passed all of my classes. Ten years later I’m back in it. It’s very uncomfortable. So far, so good.

  • Shit Mark. I remember when I paid you $100 for marketing advice. I asked why my coaching blog wasn’t growing. You said, “Branding?” That’s the only thing I remember. Now I’m a copywriter, travel vlogger, and life coach. But what I really want is to write my fiction. Hit me up if you need help with anything.

  • It is easier to start from “zero” when you’ve already been succesful at something in life and you have a backup plan. Totally different thing when you are more than thirty and most of what you’ve experienced has been failure (ot stupid wins such as being the best student in yoir career but have no support from your shitty university to get an scholarship abroad) and piracy from others who have stolen your good ideas, and you have no support system or money to hire an specialized team. The article title is missleading. It should be called: How to be succesful AGAIN in your 30’s at something new after you were ALREADY SUCCESFUL at something else.

  • Can’t relate to this at all. I despise being at the bottom of the mountain, because I already know how much consistent effort I will have to put in for months with 0 rewards (or rather negative rewards, because I have to do things I really don’t want to do, like exercise) during that whole time, because it takes so long for results to actually start showing. There is no excitement there. I just see chores that I will have to do for the rest of my life, just so I don’t feel like shit all the time. Great, how exciting. I’m also terrified of making mistakes because of fear of punishment, so being bad at something just sucks.

  • After losing against his animators who were on strike, Walt Disney was so pissed off, he did not give a damn about his studios and delegated their management on other people. So he spent hours each day riding with his daughters on his life size model trains with tracks that went around the house… they had so much fun, that a light bulb went on in his head… a park with a railroad that went through all scenarios of his movies… the concept of the Theme Park was born… and he regained his passion for the kind of work he loved

  • Light bulb moment ! Thank you so much Mark once again, so happy I found your content around 8 years ago! This is exactly what happened to me, I started off as the beginner and no pressure on me and that changed into the expert with all the pressure on me and I burnt out. I spent the last 3 months rebuilding my habits and focusing on what really matters.

  • I just think, and I am completely new here having never known this guy before, that he bought the billionaire stuff for his articles. I mean he has the umbrella lights and the green background and all the best shit. I don’t know he just doesn’t seem to be an amateur or starting at the bottom so to speak like he is trying to. Yes go ahead and give me shit for this comment.

  • I’m not seeing any of this ‘Excitement, Anticipation, Hope, Motivation’ at the bottom – where did you find them? Also, didn’t you say in your book that Hope was bad? xD I envy you Mark. I would also love to enjoy being bad at things while being supported by solid financial stability from previous successes 😀 but yes I will tune in to the new vids lol

  • I feel like the timing of this article couldn’t have been more perfect for where I’m currently at in my life (mid-30’s, recently accepted a prestigious position in my field). I’m still riding the thrill of the “climb” but I’ve felt like I’m about to summit soon. Thank you, Mark. You’ve truly been one of the most influential people in my life.

  • Start over at 30? Man I wasn’t taken seriously until I was 30. And I would not want to be 30 again. I started over at 40, divorced at 42 and my life all around changed for the better. I’m 56 now and getting used and starting to accept the grey hair . The only issue is getting rid of the baggage in my head from the past. All the limiting bullshit fed to you by people who are…. Get this as insecure as I was . I figure I listen to what people have to say but I’ll decide if I take it or leave. Believe in you knowledge and ability and your experiences .

  • I really don’t want to be that person. But heck, I’ll do it anyway. There has to be some degree of realism here. I wouldn’t say that there is a “freedom” to fail in everything. For some of us, failure means a loss of dreams, a loss of confidence, it could mean the loss of stability or income. It could mean the loss of a relationship. Just because you aren’t successful YET, doesn’t mean there is NOTHING to lose. Using myself as an example, Working a full time job (that often needs me to work outside normal hours) means my free time is incredibly precious. I have my own manga I’m making. That free time that I spend on comic/manga creation comes at a price. I have less time for friends and family. I have less time to grow and develop in other ways or do other hobbies. If someone is trying earnestly at something but never makes it to the top of the mountain, they’ll have to ultimately face themselves and decide if that journey, while not successful in its primary goal, had a silver lining. If they could enjoy the journey, sure it was still technically successful. But it’s not as simple as “you are new/not professional” thus there is nothing to lose. I’ve lost friends and family over my choices to focus on my career. I’ve lost some aspects of my health. I’ve lost so much time, my 20s are gone and I’m just as broke now as I was then. I’m far better now skill wise, and only 12 years after I started am I finally seeing results. But whenever you start something new, in that short period, sure there isn’t much to lose, but the longer you do something, it’s possible the higher the stakes could get and you can’t get any of that time back.

  • Love your content Mark. It seems like this article is particularly addressed to me, I can totally relate. Long story short: I had a stable career and was holding a senior position for almost 6 years, left everything early this year, moved to a new country and starter a new career from scratch. Sometimes I feel terrible about myself messing up my limited resources and wasting some colleagues’ time, but damn I have been missing the feeling of figuring out how things work and the self-satisfaction that comes with realizing we are progressing/ climbing the mountain. Thank you

  • Sometimes we say we dont have time. But my decision to take on a data analytics bootcamp, being a 39 year old business person whilst having a full time top management position, with 3 kids was simple. I begin tracking how much time I spent on social media, games, and I realized I averaged 90 minutes daily. So, there was a data analytica bootcamps for professionals and I decided I’ll used thay 90 mins per day to learn this new skill. So far so good. But being a top mgt for the past 14 years and working for various founders had left me burnt out, and just so damn tired of hearing valuation, growth hack bla bla bla. i hope I can slowly transition into a freelance data analyst and just make the same amount of money I do now in 1-2 years thats fine. But at least I might get to spent quality time with my fam, and that’s my driver to make the decision to leave corporate life. We’ll see! Good luck and stay well for everyone!

  • Loved this article buuuttt I don’t think you’ve seen the articles I’ve seen. I’ve spend almost 10 years on YouTube, mostly geeling out about psychology and self help (and spiritual) stuff. There are actually A LOT of websites that provide deep and insightful content on these topics. But welcome to the game Mark!

  • Haven’t read (yet) any of your books, Mark, but your message is still felt. I particularly like when you said that high-quality problems are still problems, and what you did about it. It’s hopeful that you’ll encounter more people like me in this platform. Those who don’t exactly know you and your past work, but are still looking forward to what you put out next because of what you’re doing now. Cheers!

  • I know Mark Manson for many years. I read his books and love most of his content. But to be honest this does not feel like climbing a new mountain. He is fucking rich and has a huge fanbase. I understand his attention and wish him the best but he is not really a beginner or somethin similiar. It feels a bit manipulative or like a marketing strategy, to fit in this Youtubeworld, where people are climbing mountains here for many years. He has nothing to lose and can fail without fear. There are no serious economical consequense such as for someone who really is a beginner and maybe quit his job to make youtube articles.

  • What you describe here hits so close to home. It’s weird because I technically sit at the table of “nothing to lose,” but it doesn’t feel that way. And I continue to trade the potentiality of achieving the life I want for the security of the one I’ve managed to build. But deep down, I love creating and making mistakes at it. And I’m slowly making the choice to choose that over the boring old choices I’ve made for years now. Inspiring as always, Mark. Thanks!

  • You’re views are interesting but here is mine. Your number 1 mistake is that you thought you were on top of the mountain already when you clearly are not. You sound like someone who wants to achieve a lot of things and so your mountain will be higher than others. Stop thinking that you are already on top. The most successful people only reach the top when they retire, or even die. As long as you’re in this game, never be so arrogant to think that you are at the top.

  • The way you spoke in this article is the way you write, would have been a new article to read in your blog. But article feels better like you narrating an audiobook. Awesome strategy man. Keep trying new things, you have my support. There is no final destination, just the endless process so we might as well choose the endless destination.

  • Oh thank god, I loved your previous jump into article content and have been disappointed when the only Mark Manson youtube suggestions were months old. Also heavily relate to that peak feeling, and recently took up two new hobbies/side projects to get that feeling of Part III you described. It’s incredibly freeing and exciting.

  • so true. top student in the top college in an engineering major but i’m forced to perform well bc i need the scholarship. the pressure is immense, especially after making the Dean’s List last sem. people like to brush my concerns aside as “humble bragging” but… it’s lonely and stressful at the top, it’s not as fun as it seems. plus, i’m only at the top bc i work my fucking ass off while people are playing. i want to be like them too but… gotta keep myself in school, heh

  • Thanks Mark — first time checking out your website. I literally have one of your books on my bookshelf 5 feet away from me. It is very encouraging to hear you say that you think YouTube has so much room for growth and potential (I’ve been told its already hit its peak and saturated) I’m 26 and have tried building a network marketing business for the last 6 years and have absolutely nothing to show for it. I’ve hit my ends wit. What I really want is to create my own brand and be absurdly creative too. This little article help me realize it’s not too late to start my own brand — using YouTube and other platforms to fuel my dreams. I’ve been working on music (loft chill beats) to express my creativity and now want to make YouTube articles again. Thanks Mark

  • U edited this? i can say i impressed, the anxiety meme at 1:29 made me think you hired a young editor for cheap. And the amount of clips and cuts and zoom ins and outs, made me think, this young editor wanted to keep the job, and tried really hard. So i was surprised, congrats on the article edition, really good. Have a nice climb

  • the truth is real geniuses know they k ow nothing ( dunning kruger effect ) so mark if you think you are the top of the mountain.. then you re not . Financial / celebrity is just the appearance of success. There is always room to grow even as a multi millionaire. It’s just harder to see it because of inflated ego

  • Hey Mark! I started following your blog a long time ago (15+ years ago?). It was so long ago I remember when you used the f word in the title of something, and this hardly ever done back then. I didn’t mind but I wrote you suggesting you’d have more success if you didn’t do that, lol, how things have changed. But I kept reading for years. Don’t why I stopped, no particular reason, just gradually moved on to newer writers. So now I see you have a YouTube website, congrats! No pressure, I’m subscribed and I hope you do well on it. Look forward to checking out your content.

  • What if I have all the exact opposite issues? That at the bottom of the mountain I feel everything you should feel at the top but in the sense that I’ll never make it and that I’m only 24 and I feel like I’m running out of time or that I’m past my prime. Or the saying that I don’t like being bad at things but I just like to be in that zone where you feel confident in what you’re doing either even if you win some lose some but you know that you have an excellent handle on what you’re doing. I feel like I need to switch all that around. How do I do that?

  • I wish I could like this article twice – I found your newest content and am deep diving into your older stuff – so you succeeded though I knew of the book TAONGAF I hadn’t read it, and I came here because of a new article, and now I’m working my way backwards. I did see a disconnect between your older content and newer which this article explains. I have been climbing my mountain for 30 years and this article has helped me reframe that journey. Two years ago Irealised that the top of the mountain wasn’t going to give me fulfilment because eI met people who were there and still struggling in this writer’s journey. But this article helped me reframe the last 30 years and be thankful for them because had I reached success early I might have not had all those years of joy you mention trying with nothing to lose. So thank you for sharing.

  • Hi Mark, I am not the one to comment usually but this article put a big smile on my face. After feeling like shit for being a “beginner” in almost everything, it is a relief to hear one of my personal heroes saying that it is a blessing rather than a curse. I have long dreamed of starting my own blog/channel but thought I was too “uneducated” or “inexperienced”, but this article felt like a big push to make an ass out of myself and still 𝘦𝘯𝘫𝘰𝘺 the process. I love everything you do and aspire to change others people’s lives like you did mine when I picked up your book during the pandemic. Cheers!

  • Love your articles man, there is something about the way you describe ideas…a really unique approach. And congrats on deciding to enter the article world, let me roast You from a filmmakers perspective to help your ass improve. The green background sucks, it’s like you wanted to buy green screen but instead decided to create your own with lights. Stick to natural colors at the start or change it to something that creates color contrast and makes the skin pop out, cyan works really great for this. Create the background more interesting – buy props, plants, books, book shelves etc. And finally fine tune the placement of the main light, ideally should be at a 45 degree angle from the camera, try putting it closer maybe, if you get the reflection of the light in the eye, those are bonus points. Enjoy and good luck, waiting for the next article!

  • Quite relatable. Nice story! If you feel too much pressure start fresh with something new. I will try it for myself as well. Getting stuck & bored in something you don’t like anymore is not good for your wellbeing. I basically think this sounds like a bore-out… (I had one, so I know what I’m talking about.) 😉

  • Hey Mark, Good to see you found your new mountain to climb. This would be clear to you already but my journey these are my 2 cents. YouTube demands consistent articles. That leads to burnout. Where as at same time quality of content decreases. YouTube game is about click baits . I would like to see you doing more podcast or something like “Love is not enough” Also you know human psychology better than rest of others. Human connection has been overlooked and need fixing by many. Friend of mine had “connection course” which has helped hime so something in that direction. And I miss Mark who wrote Models as there is actually need of that content on YouTube and you nailed it in second edition. I have been helped by your content. So let me know if I can help you in this endeavour in any way. And All the best for your climbing new article Creation Mountain. Thanks -Devidas

  • Mark your very down to earth. Thank you for this content. This article makes me more appreciative and comfortable with the situation I’m currently in. All I’ve been thinking of lately is just being at the top and when will I be at the top while in the mean time I should appreciate of the process that I am in.

  • Very insightful, thank you! Listening to you, I just realised that I have been doing this all my life- challenging myself and starting from a scratch a couple of times, doing many different jobs with no (or very little) prior experience while studying for my degree. I used to call them “learning opportunities” like : “communication classes” (bar assistant job), “fitness classes” (cleaning job), “memory training” (restaurant job), “social awareness training” (ushering job) etc 😂. My actual profession and current job is to teach and perform music and the learning opportunities there are unlimited…

  • As a longtime fan I’m glad to hear you confirm what I’ve known for a while, you have been half assing it. I really appreciate you being honest about this, I figured it was due to the influx of fame. I think it’s great you are getting back to what you enjoy. I turned thirty during Covid and entered a career field that sucked as a result of the pandemic. I completely burned out after years of grinding and climbing the mountain when everything shut down on me right as I was ready to move forward. Excited to see what’s up next.

  • Mark, allow me to quote you: “The only thing that can ever truly destroy a dream is to have it come true”. Well, I strongly believe that this saying fits perfectly in the present context, but at the same time I look at it from a very positive perspective, that is, even though you have fulfilled your dream, who says that we cannot continue to dream?! I wish you much success in this new journey, and I am very glad that I can witness it. Because, since I discovered your work, there have been some changes for the better in my life and for other people close to me also, and for that, i can only be greatful. Keep being Mark fucking Mason. PS: Embrace the difficulties that will come, they are actually the flavor of a journey. (After you overcome them, and I’m sure you will)

  • This is great! Glad to see you moving this direction, would be super cool to get snapshots of your journey. I’m a content creator, but am not consistent (and don’t have any type of following for that matter), but I’ve always appreciated what you do so it would be cool to see your journey in content creation like this, like what you learn, your fuckups, your fuckups that turned out to be super beneficial, etc. etc. Any way you go, though, looking forward to coming along for the ride

  • Glad again to see more honesty from those like yourself that have actually peaked the mountain to pass on the wisdom that any baggage you carried up there in unresolved trauma will just be a big weight to pull you down the slopes from the summit. You did a great article on attachment theory which resonates a lot with personality formation theory, be great to hear HOW people (and you) have actually been successful in getting out from under things like low self esteem, imposter syndrome etc. It’s certainly not by just chasing ‘success’, this much we can reliably say at this point, right?

  • In 1947, a couple of aliens flew to Earth in a silver saucer-shaped craft. After closely observing mankind, they shit themselves laughing and crashed into the desert in Roswell, New Mexico. The US Army found the shit covered craft, conducted an investigation, deduced what happened and out of embarressment told the public it was a weather balloon.

  • Soooooooo…you became successful and are telling others who haven’t that it’s not too late? I see how that might seem good but how is someone going to do something beyond relating intellectually to some aspects of your story when they can’t relate with having the privelege of starting over without the struggle of survival? Should people listen to someone who could also never relate to them? And what might be or are the consequeses of that?

  • Dude, talk about how on-the-nose you articulated something I experienced with a business taking off quickly – how you feel your whole identity is stuck on that and you spend all your time ‘managing’ rather than creating for the sake of creating. Stoked to see where your YT adventure takes you, Mark, and if ya fall off the mountain try to not land on your head? 😛

  • GREAT… im on the opposite path… moving from shooting article and photo everyday to writing everyday… I truly hope you improve your article skills and we never see this green screen back ground and the light from it bouncing onto your self and the shadow of your mic on your forehead… keep pushing bud… you have literally changed my life… Let me know if you need some advice on shooting I would love to help and give you a lesson.

  • I just don’t get it. All these articles and people are talking backwards to people, after they’ve achieved their success and have financial security, then they suddenly realize they’re not happy. How did you even get to a point of success? I’m not happy now, what am I to do with the advice of someone who’s backtracking on their success trying to tell us that we have it better? Unlimited potential means you are nothing.

  • I can relate to it somewhat. I was accepted in theatre school against everyone’s expectation. When I play theatre, it is all fun and games. But than I got a part for the pilot of a tv show, I actually recogniced some actors I was on set with. In theatre I am just a guy doing his thing, but suddenly I had to do it in front of a camera with a whole crew off people. The pressure off that moment wasn’t something I was ready for, I failed, and I quit acting because of insecurity. Maybe I need to start it over again.

  • Most self-improvement is based on $$$$ and getting you miserable. Good thing my spidey senses start tingling when I hear such nonsense. Ofcorse you will make a big $$$ too of this. I mean I know multiple people who own books you sell so.. Its also a business. BUT you are the first person that does not create misery in this to get people to buy more or tune in more. The first sincere (for as far as I know) self-help person if I may call it that, I have heard so far. Hope that it is sincere and I know it’s still a business but… I normally don’t even watch this kind of content and just do in life actually cause that in the end helps the most. Most things I already know but there are a few things u say that really but really ar helpful. I don’t feel shitty afterwards and also not weeks later. I don’t start to grind or rush anything and remain happy with what I do. Mark, you’re something else keep going. 🙂 thank you for being different

  • Dear Mark, Sending love and hello from Malaysia! Thanks for your honesty, guidance to accept hard feelings and making these difficult emotions so relatable to life. Just wanna share my thoughts that I missed your short articles, realising your content is so useful with so much takeaways, it’s hard to focus and digest in long form content.

  • I completely understand your plight. I have a number succeeded in a number of different challenges in my life (failed more than 1 too), and felt good about them. I knew that I was lucky and owed a lot of my success to the help of others, but I eventually wanted another challenge. I am now a successful small business owner that doesn’t want to lose what I’m very lucky to have, but I also want to continue to learn, grow and risk, for personal growth. I wish you all the luck in the world, and hope you’ll wish me the same on my next adventure. Cheers.

  • Hah! NEVER too late. Spent the bulk of my life working, punching the clock as an hourly union guy, coming and going, going through the motions. Never knew what I wanted or where I wanted to go. After 4 decades of being a slave to the clock I fell into it. Union guy embraces process improvement, invents a union accepted job (one of three in my time). Eventually provided enough value I was “invited” into a corporate resource position. No degree. No interview. Just offered a job at way over twice what I was making on the floor. Then incentivized to the max every year I worked at that. Mind blown. I was very much appreciated. Couldn’t believe the “bed of roses” I fell into. And yeah, loved going to work and working for and with the people I was with. I was 56 years old when I jumped ship. Now retired and still can’t believe my great fortune! Bottom line? If you don’t know where you’re going it’s a lot harder. But if an opportunity presents, don’t shy away. It can change your life. Stick with it and keep your eyes (and your mind) open.

  • On first reading “The Subtle Art of Not Giving a Fuck”, I loved the concept. Then, doing a little research, I realised your book was just a pop psychology version of Stoicism, without the depth and history. When I saw you were next releasing a book entitled “Everything is F*cked” you solidified that impression. I was out.

  • Dear Mark, I hate self help gurus. I especially hate when I like self help gurus. I don’t care that you’re not perfect. I don’t care that you’re probably not 150% or even like 80% living in alignment with what you say. I think there’s a solid chance you’re not wrong about things. I also think there’s a solid chance you decided to make a living off of imparting wisdom to people in their most vulnerable. Which…is sort of like…what’s the metaphor….fish in a barrel? It’s quite possible you know stuff. I wish you didn’t have to be an online guru. I don’t really have a concise point. Just. Hey. Sincerely, Nobody

  • Yup. Truth. Reminds me of the poem by Stephen Crane–> A man saw a ball of gold in the sky; He climbed for it, And eventually he achieved it — It was clay. Now this is the strange part: When the man went to the earth And looked again, Lo, there was the ball of gold. Now this is the strange part: It was a ball of gold. Aye, by the heavens, it was a ball of gold.

  • So after he succeeded he’s got the luxury to say that he likes f*****g up with stuff. Yes he is addressing to a very young audience with that article that’s for sure. A young audience that they still can not differentiate the b******t from the real. Mark, i do not envy you i think that your books are great however you might haven’t got anything else to say to the world. Have you ever considered that? And that’s fine you did more than enough more than everyone in here would have ever achieved. “Envy you”!! #$%^&#####@@@@@!!!!!

  • This article is at the right place at the right time (of my life). I am an undergrad in a society / country with high labour discrimination for college undergrads. Thanks for this article. It’s like a younger, funnier version of Jordan Peterson. And thanks for other language options for the subtitles, as I am continuously studying Spanish.

  • I’ve come to the conclusion…take a thing…anything…like writing or rollerskating…thing in and of itself basically good. Thing=good. In capitalism though thing can’t just be good it must also be profitable to be good thing/profit=good which ultimately means thing must be leveraged as worthy enough to make profits since most things already exist so thing is no longer good it’s now become profit=thing(exploitability) I fucking suck at math but my point is…just like rock stars…you see any kind of success which is the goal….and well quality of thing=fucked

  • Hey, you. Yes, you! Learn to code! It’s amazing. Everything you need to know can be learned online, right here on YouTube (well, with the occasional Stack Overflow visit that becomes more frequent the better you get at this, all for free. Free Code Camp and Udemy are good. I am not endorsed by either but have just been coding for over 20 years now and can say both of those are legit. Plus there are indivisible devs and other websites out there who can teach you deeper into a specific field or tools set. Great future proof job security, you get to be creative and solve problems, and it’s just fun. The dopamine rush from figuring out a coding problem is delightful.

  • After chaotic past 3-5 years, now I have decided to restart my journey in Statistics. I feel in love with it and ended hating it because of few bad jobs, but I think its about time look back up on the mountain, suck all the shit up, and fucking go ALL OUT!!! See you on the top from a different mountain!!

  • “I like being bad at things” I thing that the struggle is more important than being “bad at stuff”. I think you’re pretty good in the YouTube game, since algorithm showed me your website multiple times and I have always enjoyed the style of your articles. They are good imo. They probably aren’t the most perfect thing, but that’s the thing I like about these articles. Finally someone who doesn’t do everything “perfect”. Just a normal fucking dude talking to a camera, talking about books and stuff.

  • I’m really glad I have never blew up and got famous. I WOULD have fucked it up. I KNOW for a fact I would have. I actually feel sorry for influencers. yall have so many eyes on you and so much risk of rejection and having people dox you and hold you on a pedestal? Not for me. I’m flawed, angry, about half crazy, and my belief system is so lost in fantasy bs and out in left field I doubt I could relate to anyone perusal me at all… I don’t want or need that responsibility.

  • That was certainly interesting and not what I expected, but I can relate. When I almost reached 30 in a one stop light basic non-cultured American farm town, I sunk into this weird depression state that im getting old leaving my age demographic and that I missed out on opportunities with friends and fun. That going home after work and perusal TV with my gf and fathering my son was it. However it took a lot of time to realize that I outgrew a ton of people, I had willingly distanced myself from old friends that made bad decisions and whatnot, I had a bigger idea of life than those I grew up with. It had isolated me in ways where I felt I have no true friends left. However at 31 a work pal invited me to some camping rave festival and it changed my whole perspective of life. Ive met a lot of new people, who inspired me to pick up Poi Spinning and music production. There are tons of people older than me living it up still and doing things, its exactly what I needed around me. Mark I really love your website, I always felt relative on your teachings but you go in such depth it helps me connect the dots and spread it to others. Not that im anywhere near greatness myself, I definitely feel trapped in a hell of low-energy people, but im fighting my way through to find my tribe!

  • I’m reading the Bear Grylls autobiography. A large portion is about climbing Everest. There’s like 100 pages about climbing and coming down and like 2 pages about what it felt like to be sitting on the peak. I think he might agree on the subtle mountain notion. But maybe I’m wrong. But he did also climb many more mountains after that.

  • I’m a 31 year old waitress who makes bank but knows that my body will start telling me soon enough – enough is enough. I dont care about being better than 99% of others but I want to have freedom that being a waitress never can offer. I’m 32 in 3 weeks and I think I’m finally ready to stop fucking around.

  • Nice to see you again Mark. I’d wondered just the other day about you. Making articles has been on my list too – do you recommend any course on YT or elsewhere on editing, articlegraphy? One of my favourite creators here is James Jani, he’s so good i wonder if he’s a bit anxious too about having to produce something good. Until next time! 🍷

  • You actually have nothing to lose, I mean we will all die some day, it might feel from your newfound perspective that you’ve ‘gotten so good at xyz’ but if you think about it these are all just clever ways to pass time while you are here. So find another game, rinse and repeat. Really enjoy your content!

  • I think you give very good advice to all those outwardly confident and bolshy but inside insecure and uncertain young people out there. I wish there had been such a one when I was young except there probably was but in the days before social media much harder to find. I think you use bad language TOO MUCH. I know it’s to be on the same wavelength as your main followers but I think you overdo it and it kills the emphasis. It detracts rather than spices up. I must say it’s much harder not to care about other people and ones acceptance or rejection by them than is often made out. Because if you really don’t care it means you are a sociopath or even a psychopath. And I’ve known one or two people just like that. Both were lovely,they were compelling,they attracted,and the absolute strength of their not caring if the whole world hated them for some opinion or ruling was awesome but a bit scary too. One of them was my Mum. Bless her! I was going to wish you good luck in your new direction but it shouldn’t be luck if your skill and talent is involved. I’m sure youll have success in your endeavours only as you’ve found out,as everyone finds out when they get to the top of the mountain,there is nothing there. I once read an interview with the actor Alan Alda of Mash fame and he said how fame could be a burden when journalists use long lens to snap you in your garden or doorstep you outside restaurants but at least people like him had the money to pay for some security but he felt VERY sorry for poor people who inadvertently got famous but couldn’t afford to put up that security wall for protection.

  • Life goes by in a flash, so many people focus on career, money, property etc.. and none of it really matters because before you know it you will be 80 years old, it’s so true. So if you are in your 20’s or 30’s and think you have plenty of time you don’t. I swear you will be middle aged then 80 and think I can’t believe how fast my life has gone. I suggest you just focus on being kind and find someone you truly, truly love, it’s all that really matters anyway. Oh and do be aware of attachment theory so you waste no time with the wrong partner. If someone has tons of selfies and photos of themselves on social media, they are a narcissist and avoid them like the plague..

  • I hated when you speculated that the people perusal this were probably young. I’m 44 and feel like I’ve lost so many years of my life. And as soon as this article started, I wanted to turn it off because you kinda suggested that its young people who have a chance and starting again. Bummed me out, man.

  • I’ll only subscribe if you watch the language. Expletives are negative energy. They assault the sensibilities. You said more in this article when you weren’t using the expletives than when you were. I could really feel your desire to be creative again, and then the f bombs dropped…why? Not creative. At some point we must grow up and realize we really are teaching the younger generation and so what we teach is really important.

  • I once heard that you live life in decades. Your teens are a time when you’re finding the things you love and the things you dislike. Your twenties are when you start to buckle down and narrow your vision to work on the things that you loved in your teens. Your thirties are a time for mastering what your twenties were building. Your forties are when you combine everything from your teens up until your thirties and create a successful future. Every other decade after that is a result of the 50 years of hard work it took to become successful. People need to realize that life does not stop when they’re 30, too many people get discouraged because they haven’t accomplished their goals yet. The biggest piece of advice is to just be 1% better than you were yesterday. If you wanted to become a software developer, it’s still possible, just select a language and put 30 minutes of work in every single day. Even if you’re just learning about classes for 30 minutes, that’s 30 minutes of learning compared to doing 0 minutes of work. It’s the small wins that get you ahead, stop focusing on hitting a homerun when it’s easier to get on base.

  • I’m not really somebody that reacts on articles but this article came at the right time. I’m 25 years old and I’m currently studying for my second degree. Because of my age, I sometimes feel “late” because of the fact that a lot of people of my age are starting kids, have steady careers, buying a house… and here I am: still studying, wanting to travel the world and doing my own thing instead of the “usual”. Thank you for making this article. It really made me realize that I’m making the right choices. 🙂

  • I’m 30 and I just went back to college last semester after TEN years. It’ll be another two years at least before I finish. To be honest, I can’t help but feel a little shame when someone asks what I do and I tell them I’m a student. But I quickly toss that feeling aside because I am also so damn proud of myself. Hey at least I’m doing it right? 🤷🏻‍♀️👌

  • Yes!!! I went back to school to finish my bachelors at 42. Then to my master’s where I found my dream job and started traveling the world to do it. At 48, I’ve just applied to a PhD program. I’ll have at least a decade doing my own research, teaching, and hopefully changing the world. 🤞🏻 Is it a little weird thinking that my youngest children will be entering university when I’m still there? Yup. It’s still worth it and not too late. And I’ve been meaning to say: your solo travel articles started at the perfect time. I am always inspired by what you’re doing. 🙂

  • I am currently 25 and struggling with my career path, applying for jobs, and figuring out my future. When you said “being 25 is still young to figure it out” it made me feel so much better about my future. You have always been the content creator that gives such meaningful articles to us. Thank you, thank you, thank you. 🙂

  • Oh my gosh I needed this. The time between the holidays and the new year always feels very weird to me and I often get that antsy, “you’re running out of time” feeling. I’ve totally been in a career path rut and been unsure of what I want to do, and even though I’m 24, it’s stressing me out. Thank you for this little pep talk. <3

  • Society is simply really messed up mentally!!! I just turned 22 and i graduated in college for business management, but i decided not to work in this field. People pressure me SO much everyday because i took 6 months off to recover emotionally at home, while my college friends already have jobs. But why should i apply for jobs i dont even want to?? Anyway, i’m trying my best not to listen to their bullshit as i slowly develop my jelewry design career, wich is what i truly love 💖

  • I’m 28 years old and I hate my job. I’ve been stuck in a call center for the last 10 years, my entire working life. Just tonight I was crying to my husband after an AWFUL day at work, wishing my dream career wasn’t so far away. I have at least 6 years of school left until I reach my first goal. I was feeling so defeated, thinking about how much time (10 years) I wasted. In 6 years I’ll be 34, and assuming I get into my dream career a year after that, I don’t plan on retiring until I’m 65 so that’s 30 years! Thank you for this article. <3

  • I am 23 years old, will be 24 in March and I’m currently in first year of my Master’s Degree Program. I am studying Library and Information Science. But the more I am approaching to finish my studies the more I feel like this is not the path I am supposed to take in life. I first started perusal Youtube when I was about 11 or 12 years old. Yours was actually one of the first websites I was subscribed to, next to Ingrid and Fleur and Fowler sisters Elle and Blair. Through Youtube articles I learnt how to do makeup, and even though I attended professional makeup class for 3 months 5 years ago, and am a certified makeup artist, I still think I learnt most through Youtube. There was literally sooo many times I thought about starting my own website but always felt like it was too late. There was always some excuse.. wondering about what people may think or say, not having the right equipment, not having the money to buy the equipment etc. In the last couple of months I truly felt like being a makeup artist and doing makeup looks on myself and on clients, is what I am supposed to do in life. And I know 2020 is going to be my year when I finally really start moving things in this direction. This article just seems like one last sign I needed to see, thank you 🙂 <3 p.s sorry for the longest comment ever 😀

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