Ok. I admit it. I never thought I’d write a post like this. If I’m honest my imposter syndrome is screaming so loudly I can barely hear myself think but I’m pushing through it nonetheless because this is important.
I started my own personal creative journey on Youtube. At first I was so terrified of judgement I didn’t tell anyone about my channel. Initially I was relieved when I didn’t get any views but after the first few videos it started to bother me that no one was watching.
Many of you commented on this note that you want your readers to “feel something”. I’ve had somewhat of an epiphany over the last few weeks and I have to share this with you.
For years I was convinced that good writing (the kind that gets read, shared and remembered) followed a formula:
Short sentences. Punchy openings. Clean ideas wrapped in a clean structure. The kind of advice you hear over and over from every creator-growth guru online.
Be clear. Be concise. Be useful. Cut the fluff.
And I believed it. I followed these methods when I was trying to get a KDP publishing business going back in 2016, I followed it when trying to write Amazon FBA product descriptions and also when I started my YT channel in 2022. I devoured courses, mimicked the tone of others, shortened my sentences, and cut my paragraphs in half.
I wrote what I thought would perform, and sometimes, it did. But the longer I followed that path, the more something began to feel off. My writing was sharp, but hollow. Structured, but forgettable. The metrics were fine, but the work had no weight.
That’s when I started asking different questions. Why is it that some writing lands, not just performs, but actually moves people?
Why do certain posts, words or phrases live in your body long after you’ve closed the tab?
What I discovered had nothing to do with tactics and everything to do with human psychology. Because while most writing advice focuses on surface structure like hooks, headlines and formatting, the kind of writing that truly sticks works on a different layer entirely.
Emotion over rationality
Impactful writing works on the emotional nervous system, not just the logical brain. Cognitive neuroscientists call this dual processing: System 1 and System 2 thinking.
System 2 handles logic, calculation and clarity. But System 1, the emotional system, is what actually drives most decisions, and writing that connects bypasses logic. It speaks directly to the limbic brain. It creates what psychologists call somatic markers, which are like emotional imprints that tell the body, this matters.
That’s when everything changed for me.
I stopped asking “what will perform?” And started asking, “what will resonate?” Now that might sound like kind of the same thing but it’s not. There is a subtle difference which I will get into later in this post.
I no longer saw writing as output, or as a growth strategy, or a content funnel. I started to see it as integration. A way to metabolise emotion. To give shape to ambiguity. To reflect not just what I knew but who I was becoming.
And so I want to share a deeper theory of what writing actually does and how to write posts that don’t just get read, but are remembered, shared and have an emotional impact. Templates, hooks and formulas can get you attention but that’s useless without understanding the underlaying foundation beneath it all.
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1. Clarity earns attention. Emotion earns trust.
Clarity can earn you attention. From a neurological perspective, clarity activates the prefrontal cortex, the rational, executive part of the brain responsible for processing language, recognising structure, and reducing ambiguity. That’s why so many writing tips focus on clear structure, strong hooks, and punchy sentences. They speak to the cognitive brain.
But resonance, the thing that makes writing feel real and the thing that makes someone trust you, that doesn’t live in the prefrontal cortex. It lives in the limbic system, the emotional core of the brain.
This is where we process meaning and the limbic system doesn’t understand language. It only understands emotion. It tracks things like tone, cadence and imagery. It responds to how something feels, not whether it makes sense.
Which means if your writing is clean, helpful, and structured…but emotionally sterile… the body will register it as forgettable, no matter how valuable it is.
This is why so many well-structured posts fail to land. The reader’s mind says “this is useful,” but the nervous system says “I’ve already seen this a hundred times.”
We are told to optimise our writing for clarity, but what no one teaches you is how to speak to the body.
The way you do that is through emotional texture:
A phrase that hits just a bit too close to home.
A sentence that makes the reader pause and breathe.
A metaphor that bypasses logic and lands in the gut.
A moment of hesitation, contradiction or doubt, that human crack in the voice.
These are the cues the limbic system responds to. These are the moments that shift your writing from understood to felt.
Clarity opens the door, but if you want someone to walk through it, to stay, to trust you, to remember what you wrote, you have to speak in a language their body understands.
Not just the brain but the self as a whole.
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2. Mirror the mind, don’t simplify it.
Every creator wants to be helpful. It’s become the default setting of online writing: Give value. Share frameworks. Teach what you know.
And there’s nothing wrong with that. Information is useful. But helpful isn’t what makes writing unforgettable. We love to think of the brain as a super computer but this has never sat well with me because our brains are not neutral data processors.
They’re emotional pattern-matchers, which is something computers can’t do…although A.I is getting close. We evolved not to retain facts, but to detect threats, form bonds, and locate meaning. That’s why, neurologically speaking, your brain does not treat all information equally.
You can read a post with 10 bullet points and forget it by lunchtime.
But a single line in a novel, spoken at just the right moment, can live in you for decades. This is not a matter of quality. It’s a matter of encoding.
When you consume information, your brain uses the hippocampus to process and store it. But for something to stick and enter long-term memory, it must pass through the amygdala, the emotional gatekeeper of the brain.
This is crucial. If a piece of information doesn’t register emotionally, your brain assumes it’s irrelevant.
In other words:
You can be as helpful as you want. But if you don’t make someone feel, they won’t remember a thing.
This is why stories matter. This is why vulnerability matters. This is why writing with texture, with rhythm, with imagery, isn’t just style. It’s the attention hack you never thought about.
Now I don’t mean being poetic, I mean focusing on emotion and story. It’s about giving the nervous system something to hold on to.
The limbic system doesn’t care about your outline. It cares whether what you’re saying feels real. So the next time you sit down to write something helpful, don’t just ask:
“Is this useful?”
Ask instead:
“Will they remember it?”
“Did I say something that touched the heart, not just the head?”
If you look around and see what posts get shared it is very often because they touched an emotional nerve and because they made us feel like we weren’t alone.
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3. Tension is the substance. Don’t resolve it too fast.
Most creators today write with one goal: resolution.
Problem → solution. Confusion → clarity. Hook → takeaway.
But that’s not how the mind works and it’s not how transformation works, either.
The brain learns best not when it’s being told what to think, but when it’s forced to hold tension, what’s known in psychology as cognitive dissonance. It’s that friction between two competing beliefs or emotions that makes an idea stick, because the brain has to work to resolve it.
If your writing offers answers too quickly, you rob the reader of the chance to wrestle, and in wrestling, they remember. Most beginner writers are taught to offer clarity.
Say what you mean. Be helpful. Deliver the solution. But this instinct to solve quickly often short-circuits the very thing that makes a piece worth reading in the first place: tension.
Tension is not a flaw in the writing. It is the writing. It’s what keeps someone scrolling, not because they’re addicted to dopamine hits, but because their brain has detected an open loop and evolution has trained it to close that loop.
This is a well-documented cognitive phenomenon called the Zeigarnik Effect. It describes how the mind clings to unfinished tasks or unresolved narratives more powerfully than completed ones. When you introduce tension and don’t resolve it immediately, the reader’s attention deepens. They lean in. Their brain becomes more engaged because it wants and needs the resolution.
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4. If your post could only be written by you, it will find its readers.
We spend so much time online trying to reverse-engineer what “works” that we forget what actually resonates. We ask, what are people clicking on? Instead of asking, what have I lived through that no one else has?
The most compelling writing doesn’t come from tactics. It comes from unmistakable perspective, a worldview shaped by friction, contradiction, history, and choice. And that kind of writing doesn’t come from trying to “sound like a writer.” It comes from reclaiming your experience.
There is something psychologically powerful, even spiritual, about using your own voice in a world designed to flatten you into a brand. When your nervous system is conditioned to perform, mimic, and conform, it feels risky to speak in your real voice. But it’s also the only voice people will remember.
The key is to stop outsourcing your originality. Don’t write like someone who’s read a hundred blog posts. Write like someone who’s lived the problem they’re trying to solve.
We remember stories, not summaries and we remember the writer who said something true before it was safe to say it.
That’s when your writing starts to land. Not just in the algorithm, but in the mind, In the body and in the heart of the reader.
If you’re tired of writing posts that sound good but go nowhere, and you’re ready to start building a voice that feels real, then start at the root.
For more on this check out 2Hour starting point. This is the toolkit I wish I had been able to find a year ago. In it I have distilled all the lessons I’ve learned along the way from finding my voice, attracting my tribe and gaining a loyal readership of thousands.
Check it out here: 2Hour Starting Point
All the best, take care
Ben
As someone trying to write about personal experiences and really struggling to do so, I needed to read this. Expressing emotions has always been a harder task for me than it seems to be for most, so this was helpful to understand the value of doing so. Thank you. I hope this piece helps to improve my work in future :)
I've been writing short stories based on real life events, fiction, AI, mythology, beliefs, and politics since Dec 2021 and have 161 posts to date. I have 49 subscribers and an average of 90 views per lost to date. I just write on any idea or memory that pops up in my mind.