I don’t know how to put this nicely, but I
will say it straight: content writing has ruined my life.
I thought passion was everything. I thought if I loved writing enough, somehow the world would reward me. In childhood, the writing bug bit me and never left. I wrote, wrote, and wrote, pages, notebooks, blogs, whatever I could. People said, “You are talented.” And I believed them.
But now, looking back, it feels like passion fooled me.
Here is the thing nobody tells you. Writing is not just writing. It is hours of digging, reading, fact-checking, and scrolling through a thousand articles, only to feel more confused than when you started. Research is supposed to make your content valuable, but honestly, half the time it drains you before you even start typing. Sometimes I wonder, was all that time worth it?
Another truth is that as a writer, you are always proving yourself. Every single day. To clients, to readers, even to yourself. No degree magically makes you credible. It is just endless practice, endless drafts, endless rejection. And the solitude. God, the solitude. Sitting alone, filling blank pages, waiting for some validation that rarely comes.
You know that high when your article actually gets published. It is rare. Most of the time, you write something you care about, and it just floats in the void. Or it ends up buried under millions of other posts nobody ever reads. Sometimes you wonder if you should have just kept a diary instead. At least then, you are not pretending somebody will care.
Here is the harshest truth. While your friends in corporate jobs are getting salary hikes, bonuses, health benefits, and a sense of security, you, the so-called passionate writer, are hustling for a small gig that barely pays your internet bill. Clients will say, “We will pay you when you deliver quality.” But to them, quality often means cheap, fast, endless content. They do not see the hours. They do not care about the effort. And now, with ChatGPT and artificial intelligence everywhere, let us be honest, content writers are disposable. We have become unnecessary.
Writing needs discipline, like martial arts. Daily practice. Daily effort. But what is the point of discipline when the world does not value the result? Some days you sit at the desk, stare at the screen, and think, “Why am I even doing this?” It feels like a prison you walked into voluntarily.
Writing takes everything. Your focus, your time, your mental space. You finish one piece and instead of feeling proud, you just feel empty. Drained. You do not even have energy left for life outside writing. It does not just use your brain. It eats your soul, slowly.
I have asked myself this so many times. Why do we stay stuck in content writing, knowing it is killing us? Maybe because it feels like the only thing we are good at. Maybe because writing still gives us glimpses of clarity about ourselves and about the world. But is that enough? I do not think so anymore.
If you are young and chasing writing just because of passion, stop. Leave early. Do not make the mistake I made. Writing will give you words, yes, but it will not give you stability. It will not give you the life you deserve. Work in an organization, build a career where you are valued, where your efforts turn into something tangible, salary, respect, and growth. Passion can be your hobby. So please, do not let passion turn into a weight that pulls you down.
In the end, if it gives you nothing back, then it is not passion anymore; it is slow destruction.