Back then, I was just "littlesubgirl," a name that started as an inside joke with my close friends. I was a lurker. I watched other creators religiously. I left comments. I joined Discord servers. But the thought of starting my own video content creator career felt like trying to climb Everest in flip-flops.
My advice? Keep your part-time job or freelance work until you’ve had six consecutive months where your creator income exceeds your expenses by 30%. manyvids littlesubgirl squirt on my facetorrent updated
As littlesubgirl, I have a complicated relationship with the algorithm. I've been blessed by it (hello, 200k view spike at 3 AM) and cursed by it (hello, 6-month shadowban for "reused content" that was literally my original gameplay). Back then, I was just "littlesubgirl," a name
This is the real, unfiltered story of : the wins, the burnout, the algorithm battles, and the unexpected lessons that no "How to Grow on YouTube" course ever teaches you. Chapter 1: The False Start (Or, Why I Deleted My First 12 Videos) When people ask me for advice on becoming a video content creator, they expect me to talk about cameras, lighting, or SEO. But the first real hurdle isn't technical—it’s psychological. I left comments
The world doesn't need another perfect creator. It needs you . Imperfect, inconsistent, brave.
I wanted to be funny, like the big creators. I wanted smooth transitions, like the video essayists. But my early content was nervous. My audio peaked. My lighting made me look like a hostage. I quit three times.
The comments were wild: "Finally, someone real." "This is the comfort content I didn't know I needed." "littlesubgirl just became my main character."