What I learned from posting my stories on Threads & gaining 400+ followers in 1 week...
Something about starting on a new platform has always felt impossible for me & my autistic mind.
So really giving Threads a fair shot at the beginning of November was all thanks to a combination of my intuition, curiosity, and love of conversation on the page. If I had had any sense of preconceived notion or strategy going in, I doubt I would have gotten off the ground.
What I did have was a choice to follow my light and experiment with sharing my story-lessons in a shorter form than essays, longer form than captions. The perfect vehicle: a Thread.
When three of my story-based Thread posts in my first week brought a combined:
56,223 VIEWS 2,607 LIKES 127 COMMENTS 139 REPOSTS & SHARES & over 400 new FOLLOWERS
...I knew I needed to pause and really listen to what this experience was teaching me.
Here's what this month on Threads showed me about offering our stories to the world:
When we share from a place of deep reverence for our stories and genuine desire to serve, we don't NEED viral strategies or gimmicks. Numbers and algorithms become secondary to real connection.
One of my threads got just 10 likes but was the only one to lead to a booked call. Another thread didn't "pop off" but brought a creator I deeply respect into my community. Authentic storytelling naturally calls in your people.
On Threads, I gave myself permission to write as multi-dimensionally & boldly as I'm able to embody. I leaned into my core values & deeper frameworks. Each story carried a valuable lesson. I didn't write for metrics. I wrote to offer my insights to anyone who cared about the things I care about.
What moved me most wasn't the likes or follows, but seeing how people engaged with the stories themselves. The thoughtful comments. The way readers quoted and shared passages that resonated with their own communities. The dialogue that emerged around our shared values and visions for better futures.
This experience affirms the vision my intuition has been leading me to follow: Build through writing. Build through speaking your unique way. Your voice - just as it is - is ENOUGH. There are people ready & eager to engage with your stories.
But here's the key: You have to do your story work first.
This means:
- Knowing and loving your own voice and stories
- Being in deep reverence and gratitude for the unique lessons you've been given
- Taking responsibility to share those lessons
- Learning to craft memorable experiences that others can learn from
- Writing your way into such familiarity with your storyteller-teacher identity that it becomes unmistakable
It's not a posting schedule or strategy that grows your community. (It might help you stay organized, but only after you have this foundation first. ) You need to trust yourself, know your message, be self-validating, release your ego, follow your vision, then share your wisdom with your world.
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