Viral video breakdown

This is a very uncomfortable video for me to make right now, but I don't have any other choice.

Summary

A creator admits that speaking on camera still feels uncomfortable even after gaining 13,000 followers, and reframes the goal as becoming comfortable with the ongoing discomfort rather than trying to eliminate it.

At a glance

Who it’s for

aspiring and early-stage creators or professionals trying to get better at speaking and doing uncomfortable, public-facing work

Best fit: Startups

Where it fits

Top of funnel

Awareness. Reaches viewers who don’t know you yet.

How it’s built

problem-solution

State a clear problem, then walk through the fix.

educationtalking headstory-open

The hook

This is a very uncomfortable video for me to make right now, but I don't have any other choice.

Make it yours: the reusable formula

This is a very [emotion] [content type] for me to make right now, but I don't have any other choice.

Swap the highlighted parts for your own niche.

The re-hook

No, I mean that literally.

Doubles down on the vulnerability to keep viewers curious about why the creator feels forced into making the video.

Hot take

Your goal shouldn't be to get comfortable with the activity — your goal should be to get comfortable with the discomfort of doing the activity.

Why it works

The video works because it starts with raw vulnerability that contradicts the audience’s assumption that a 13k-follower creator is confident on camera, instantly making viewers feel seen. By naming a universal internal struggle (content and public speaking feel uncomfortable and never fully get easier) and then flipping the goal—from eliminating discomfort to accepting it—it delivers a mindset reframe instead of a generic tip. The subtle social proof of '13,000 of you' builds credibility while keeping the tone self-deprecating and relatable, which reduces resistance and boosts trust.

Swipe-file takeaways

  • Open by labeling your own discomfort or fear to create instant relatability and curiosity.
  • Use your follower count as soft social proof inside a vulnerable story, not as a braggy opener.
  • Turn a common frustration into a reframe ("wrong goal" vs "right goal") to deliver a memorable insight.
  • Explicitly contrast two similar-sounding ideas (comfortable with the activity vs comfortable with the discomfort) to make your core point stick.
  • Call out specific contexts (content, speaking, anything outside your comfort zone) so more viewers recognize themselves in the message.

Full script

This is a very uncomfortable video for me to make right now, but I don't have any other choice. No, I mean that literally. Courting this video, talking to my camera, posting on the internet for everyone to see, friends, family friends, ex-girlfriends, is viscerally uncomfortable. And I've been doing it for a while now. You'd think I'd have gotten used to it by now. I mean, there are now 13,000 of you that think I'm comfortable enough doing this that I deserve your follow. Thank you for that, by the way. Huge milestone. But I assure you, it's as uncomfortable for me now as it was on day one. Speaking, whether it's like to a camera or an audience or whatever, is like that. It's uncomfortable, it's weird, and it never really gets easier. And the mistake that people make with uncomfortable comfortable activities is they try to make it comfortable. Your goal shouldn't be to get comfortable with the activity. Your goal should be to get comfortable with the discomfort of doing the activity. Those are two different things and people don't realize that. If you're trying to get into content, get better at speaking or literally anything outside of your comfort zone and you cannot seem to shake the discomfort that comes with doing it, good. That's the whole point of doing that thing.

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