Avsnitt
-
Sources mentioned in today’s episode
Stylist Magazine article: https://www.stylist.co.uk/beauty/nail-technicians-support-mental-health-wellbeing/659807
Reddit thread: https://www.reddit.com/r/Nails/comments/1m6opsk/how_to_break_up_with_your_nail_tech/
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit mikhila.substack.com/subscribe -
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit mikhila.substack.com
On this HOTTEST day, I chose to tackle a particularly spicy issue.. but, honestly? It doesn’t feel spicy to me at all. It feels like common sense.
-
Saknas det avsnitt?
-
‘Harry Styles is the Alka Seltzer of Music’ was the alternative title for this one.. the original being, ‘should we let FOMO run our lives?’
I think the one I landed on is the most honest and the least misleading, based on the very random conversation we had outside Wembley on Saturday night, after leaving the Harry Styles concert. For someone who only downloaded an abum of his a few weeks ago and wasnt an immediate fan, the conversion came a little too easily. He has something, I’ll say that - among other things.. listen to the episode.
and check out Emma’s podcast here: https://substack.com/@cosycuppaclub
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit mikhila.substack.com/subscribe -
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit mikhila.substack.com
Today’s episode is sleepy - but not sleepy enough to sleep. We’re talking about my recent reaction to meds, how stress can affect more than your mood and why my difficulty balancing my want to be offline with my need to maintain a social presence led me to ANOTHER altercation with a troll this week.
-
I’ve been a creator on Youtube for 16 years, and a consumer of Youtube for 1 day more.
I was looking for inspiration on google ahead a hair appointment in April 2010. I was having a pink streak in my hair and found an image that turned out to be a thumbnail and led me to a tutorial from someone called Zoeebella - not to be confused with Zoella. I lost an hour to her videos about makeup and style before she recommended another channel called, Lanaindiana.. and down the rabbit hole I fell.
This was my first introduction to the beauty guru world. I hadn’t yet found the UK contingent but I knew I wanted in.
I set up my channel that night, made a video with my newly pink hair, of a makeup tutorial I had no business teaching anyone, and the rest is history.
Well, the rest is actually quite an expensive hobby with inconsistent returns.
Initially, I set myself up as missbudgetbeauty, I was out of work for the first time in my life, I’d become a part-time parent a year earlier and I had time to fill. On my child-free days, I made videos about makeup and quickly realised I would need to buy in more to sustain the channel. I was watching people swatch every colour of a new lipstick launch and show their drawers and drawers of makeup lined up perfectly, as a ‘collection’. Although ‘budget beauty’ was my theme, it wasn’t really in my budget to keep up with that lifestyle.
I found an office job but was quickly made redundant and then, in the most bizarre way I’ve ever found a job, I applied for a makeup counter position through gum tree. By this time I also had a blog and sent some examples of my ‘work’ to bolster my application. The interview went well but the responsibilities were vague, so I was somewhat surprised to arrive on my first day to discover I was the counter manager for Urban Decay.
I had very little retail experience, no makeup training and I was expected to write up a business plan, deal with staff and work insane Christmas hours - I mean midnight close, it was bonkers - in my first 6 months. Although I didn’t love the job, I loved the people, I loved the brand, and it gave me access to product and time to learn skills I never would have. It was, again, short lived but perfectly timed for my online hobby.
So my first year on YouTube as a whirlwind. I’d been introduced to this machine we now know as a ‘the creator economy’ and also to the beauty industry through my real job. It cemented something in me that wanted to build something. I’d never had much ambition. I’d never really found anything I thought I was particularly good at, but through YouTube, I discovered that I could connect with people. If I was interested in a subject, I could talk endlessly about it, and that suddenly had monetary value.
I made 100 videos, and spent god knows how much money, before I ever made a penny through the platform, but once it was available? Magic. Something I’d been doing for free was now going to give me an ALLOWANCE?
By the time I was pregnant with Milo, I had another job (albeit temp - not great for maternity leave) and had started another channel and blog, dedicated to pregnancy, missbudgetbaby. I was prolific. I posted 7 days a week across the channels and I loved it. But once I left work, statutory maternity pay wasn’t really cutting it and youtube wasn’t paying me much. This was where the problems became clear.
I had already been living in my overdraft(s) and putting things on cards to worry about later.. now I didn’t have enough money coming it to cover those expenses. I couldn’t afford to be buying things to review on YouTube while I couldn’t afford my basic bills, but YouTube was also my only source of income in that window of time.
I don’t think I took a full 7 days off when I had Milo. My first vlog back was with him when he was just days old, back at home. It wasn’t a financial decision, but I do think it was at least a little tinged with not wanting to be forgotten or left behind. I continued to film while he napped and post at the same volume I had before. No time to rest, this was my job now.
I started making money from as on my website and working with sponsors. It felt legitimate and like the money would keep coming in, so I didn’t need to worry about those pesky debts in the background. So long as I was paying the minimums, it would be fine.
The problem with any self employment is that the money is never guaranteed. I’m acutely aware of this in our candle business. We have had lots of orders in the first half of the year but we aren’t able to pay ourselves until the second half. YouTube is similar. Advertisers throw money at the Autumn Winter but Spring/Summer can feel LEAN.
So when I was spending like there was no tomorrow, buying a new laptop, a new camera, lights.. things I thought I needed to be a professional blogger-type, I didn’t know the well was about to run dry.
Thankfully, around that time, my temp employer invited me back. It was minimum wage and it would be part time, but I decided it was the best move. It’s always been important to me to pay my fair share of bills, so going back to an office job and having regular money coming in gave me back the independence I’d lost while on ‘maternity’. It also came just before the YouTube earnings dropped for the season.
That should have been my first lesson in making money online, but I wouldn’t learn that for a while.
Years went by and I didn’t change my ways. I got so used to random sums coming in that I just assumed that I’d be fine. I could run up a £2000 debt because soon enough, I’d get an email about a gig that would pay it off. I even reduced my days at work, to give me time to work on this internet empire.
For a while, it worked. The ‘robbing peter to pay paul’ system I had going was sustainable, so long as money was coming in, but the bottom was always going to fall out, wasn’t it?
I was getting bored of the content I was creating. I was starting to resent having to spend money to make it and my views were plummeting. Meanwhile, I had a beauty brand promising me a makeup palette that would make me so much money, I could may off my mortgage. I just had to keep things ticking over and that payday would be mine. There were sketches, samples, photos from the factory. When it didn’t come to be, I realised how much I had pinned on it.
I also realised how long it had extended content I wasn’t interested in making anymore. I couldn’t stop making beauty reviews if I was going to release a palette of my own, but my heart wasn’t in it anymore. No wonder the views were down.
Then came lockdown. A time where a lot of people found a new home on YouTube. I leaned in to daily vlogs to give myself an outlet and a routine. I was working from home and home schooling kids 6 years apart. I needed something for me and vlogs felt like an escape. Everyone was less and less interested in makeup and there were more people uploading to YouTube than ever before. It was a wild time to be in that, ‘who am I online?’ headspace.
The money was also down, because there was a lot less to advertise to a world who wasn’t leaving the house.
This was the first time I decided I needed to really look at my finances. I wasn’t spending as much and so it felt like a good opportunity to work out my budget and see if I could clear some debts. It became a bit of an obsession. I was paying off overdrafts I’d lived in for over a decade and it felt great.
I’d been making ‘shop with me’ videos for a while, trying to get around the popular ‘hauls’ by showing what was new in store without having to spend any actual money. It felt like this, coupled with my new financial attitude could really turn things around, but once the world opened up, any positive change was replaced with, ‘YOLO’ and my spending was worse than ever.
Now I felt like I was hanging on to the channel I’d poured so much of my life in to by a thread. I had to go back to the old ways, the beauty reviews, the hauls, I needed to win back my audience and make it 2012 again.
It’s worth noting that, at this time, I didn’t know I had ADHD. I can now look back and see so many triggers and spot patterns of behaviour that are so obvious. Back then, I just felt erratic and I wasn’t sure how to level out. I was constantly seesawing between ideas and moods, trying to work out how to fix things. Sometimes that meant throwing money at a problem, sometimes I was very low, regretting all of the money I’d wasted.. and the best thing for a low mood? SHOPPING.
I eventually found myself at a crossroads. Was I really going to keep flogging this dead horse? I was spending money to keep up with a lifestyle I didn’t even care about anymore, but was I ready to let it go?
I did my first low buy year. I started posting declutters and talking about the masses of wasted product and clothing I’d contributed to in my pursuit of this influencer life. It felt real and authentic in a way YouTube hadn’t in years.
Viewers responded well, but I still had one foot in the old world because the declining views were side eyeing my from the corner of the room. ‘You’re ruining everything’ they said, taunting me with their percentages and lost subscriber counts.
Everyone tells you to just keep at it, consistency is key and everyone can be successful with enough work. I’m here to tell you that success isn’t permanent. Industries change and goal posts move all the time. In my case, I found an audience with a certain type of content and then we outgrew each other. That has to be okay. It’s a bit like falling out of love. You might want to keep working on it, but sometimes enough is enough. It’s not a failure, it just ran its course.
This year has been the first where I have not been led by numbers. If I don’t have anything I want to post, I’m not posting. I don’t have a schedule or a list of content to film. I’ve started sharing my journey out of debt and my second hand shopping, but I only talk about makeup when I’m excited or when I’m reviewing things I’ve used up, in a ‘was this worth my money?’ capacity.
The early days of YouTube felt so free. You could post what you wanted, it didn’t have to be glossy or well edited, it was just people connecting with other people about shared interests.
Soon it became a way for one group to find out what they needed to buy from another group that was selling them those things. I bought things ONLY to review them. Things I wasn’t really even interested in beyond the video. I found myself in a luxury phase because of YouTube and started buying designer handbags I would have had ZERO interest in, had it not been for social media.
YouTube made me spend money as a creator and as a consumer because it made me think that was normal. Unfortunately, because I have never been good with money, I then fell in to the trap of expecting large paydays to always be around to bail me out and once they weren’t, I was in a serious pickle. I also have a self employed tax bill to pay twice a year, and I am only now getting to grips with saving for that rather than hoping the money will present itself nearer the time.
Having been a young parent with SO much to prove, social media was somewhere I could find validation in acceptance and recognition. It was a like a drug, now it’s been removed I can see more clearly but at the time, it was everything. I don’t regret it and I’m happy with the relationship I have with social media today, but it was certainly a rollercoaster. I pinned too much of my mental wellbeing on how I was performing online and, having already been an emotional overspender, it’s no wonder I put so much money behind the success of that.
I don’t think anyone could have cautioned me from going down that initial path, but I’ve been particularly reflective recently. Thinking a lot about how I want my life to look and what I’m giving my energy to. I don’t think I’d ever want to remove YouTube entirely, but removing myself from the hamster wheel, limiting my time on instagram and consuming almost no beauty and fashion content now.. I feel totally differently about my place online and what it should take to maintain it.
YouTube should be entertainment or educational, it should never be something that makes you feel less than or encourages negative behaviour. Gambling ads have this disclaimer but I think all the time, this absolutely applies to social media too. They’ve gamified every app to keep our attention so it’s no different. Whatever you enjoy, when the fun stops, stop!
And don’t buy makeup on a credit card. Ever.
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit mikhila.substack.com/subscribe -
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit mikhila.substack.com
Today’s episode has been on the list for a few weeks but I kept putting it off. Of course, once I decided to record it, I had no notes - so here’s my rambly, one-take chat about my early experience with ADHD meds after being diagnosed TWICE and looking forward to that magical fix-it-all pill I’d read about for years.
Not quite the magic pill after all.
T…
-
A friend of mind has been on a bit of a reflective journey recently and we’ve had lots of conversations about childhood and parenting. How we wish things had been, how we would be different, what worked and what didn’t. How much comparison is fair, given we’re literally living in a whole new world now, and how much we should just let go of because, ‘it’s their first time on earth too’.
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit mikhila.substack.com/subscribe -
I was laughing at Emma in Monday’s episode when she was saying she’s always starting things and then tapering off... but let’s be real. That’s me all over, isn’t it? I was talking to a friend recently about a guy she just started seeing. He was consistently letting her down and arriving late or not at all. I said, ‘I am absolutely on your side... we think this guy is a jerk and he’s messing you around,’ but, if we decide to give him a 5th, 6th, 7th chance and he sticks around, I can also flip that script pretty easily.
read more at mikhila.com
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit mikhila.substack.com/subscribe -
Emma is back for an episode that just did not want to be! Even the editing was delayed because my laptop would not accept the footage!! CURSED, I tell you.
We chatted about the difficulties of learning new things as we age, just wanting things to WORK when we plug them in, the unknown enemy that is AI and my recent dabble with app-blocking software to prevent me losing my entire life to my phone.. a longer story for another time.
Emma has a show of her own coming very soon, so if you like mid-life chat and real talk about life, loss and taking paths you didn’t plan, go and sign up to her mailing list to be notified when her first episode drops!
https://substack.com/@cosycuppaclub
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit mikhila.substack.com/subscribe -
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit mikhila.substack.com
When I tell you I was struck down with technical difficulties this week..
My phone was gaslighting me in to pretending it had no storage, by way of corrupt data. After wiping that and starting over (which was a whole thing because I lost access to my authenticator app for my work laptop the week of a whole new IT rollout) my laptop started doing THE SAM…
-
First and foremost - the first episode with Lee is RAPIDLY climbing my ‘most popular’ list, and when you consider it’s a MEMBERS ONLY, that’s bonkers! I created a little group chat on insta, for listeners to weigh on on future episodes and MAYBE even talk among themselves (it’s early days.. nobody wants to make the first move) and the poll in that group was pretty heavily weighted towards another one with Lee.
Now, I left it all a bit late (not like me at all) and so instead of the topic I had planned (listen to the end for that ironic twist) we started on Lee’s hatred for a certain style of sandals (a ‘boner killer’ - his words) and that took us on a journey down, ‘what should we be wearing now we’re 40?’.
I think a lot of people our age are under the illusion that we’re ageing in reverse of somehow freezing time, but I have a theory.. and it’s more about what we’re wearing that anything else.
I promise we’ll get back on topic for next week, but enjoy this haphazard in-care episode in the meantime.
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit mikhila.substack.com/subscribe -
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit mikhila.substack.com
Welcome back to Desperately Seeking and to a brand new *MAYBE* series, ‘couples therapy’. The idea is to cover hot relationship topics with my husband of 14 years, answer questions you guys send in ..and will we talk about the importance of reality television as pseudo psychology and a way to open up conversation about inter-personal issues? PROBABLY!
YESTERDAY, I asked instagram,
‘what question do you wish you could ask another couple?’
Almost immediately, it became apparent that the NUMBER ONE question was going to be about their sex life. Understandable! I think we’re all a little curious about what goes on behind closed doors, right? But I wasn’t sure how to organise the variety of questions in to something worth listening to.
I also realised the conversation NEEDED more voices. While we can answer for us, we can’t answer for all. So, we’re going to dip our toe for episode one, see how we go, then I’ll bring in some other perspectives for a deeper dive.
I also had so many questions about finances, chores and arguing and they feel like episodes within themselves. So, drop me a DM if you’re shy or leave a comment, if you aren’t. I’d love to hear your thoughts on this one and whether you’d like us to make it a series.
Here are the questions we cover in this one:
-
Someone just reached out to me on instagram, thanking me for sharing my own journey with sobriety and recommending a great mocktail syrup I should try. Every time someone DMs me or leaves a comment to say they’re trying it for themselves, I feel a little swell of pride - for both of us.
But that pride is often followed by a pang of guilt, because if I’m praising you for something, I must be condemning those who aren’t following suit, right?
read more at mikhila.com
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit mikhila.substack.com/subscribe -
I’m Mikhila, and I’m a rage-oholic. I didn’t recognise this trait in myself until a few years ago, because it’s not even a little but the case in my real life. I’m not an angry person, I don’t shout or argue people down. I’ll debate, don’t get me wrong.. I don’t agree with everyone, but I’m not aggressive when irritated and I have never felt the urge to punch a wall, or a person. So then, why am I so easily baited online?
find more on substack at mikhila.com
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit mikhila.substack.com/subscribe -
I’ve been consuming A LOT of money mindset content recently. I want to hear from people who’ve turned their finances around and are sharing their journey. It’s inspiring to know what motivates change and I always learn more from someone who’s struggled than a natural savant.
read more at https://mikhila.substack.com/
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit mikhila.substack.com/subscribe -
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit mikhila.substack.com
Today’s bonus episode is audio AND visual. Once again coming at you from my car with a rant about how women are raised to feel like they should be less.
Check out mikhila.com to watch the video on Substack
-
This year, I’ve been sharing my monthly spending on YouTube, with the larger goal to finally getting my financial s**t together. Turning 40, I had a bit of an ‘enough is enough’ epiphany and decided to start no only limiting my spending, but really scrutinising it.
One question I received was from someone who truly did not get it (or me) and wanted to know what my longterm plan was. Surely I wasn’t going to have these rules for myself forever. That was interesting, I hadn’t thought of it but, yes! I probably will.
In the same way that you can’t build muscle and then you’re fit forever, I can’t just ‘fix’ my impulsive, dopamine hunting brain and never worry about it again. I am someone who will likely always have to work on these things, medication or not.
This came up in the second half of April’s budget chat and I decided to put it out as an audio episode for people who would’t have watched that, but who I think would benefit from either, hearing someone explain what they themselves experience, or who need to understand the other side because that’s not at all how their mind works.
Not to be a Russel Brand about it but, I think we can all learn something from my past mistakes here.
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit mikhila.substack.com/subscribe -
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit mikhila.substack.com
Today’s episode touches on some ‘sensitive’ ground but I don’t think it should be. We’ve always been on different sides but NOW, if you’re not on my side, you’re my enemy. That shouldn’t be the case and it’s no way to change hearts and minds. It just keeps us further apart - and you know SOMEONE is benefitting …
-
This was inspired by a previous episode, a conversation with Lee and THIS fantastic interview between Lena Dunham and Drew Barrymore. I’d highly recommend you give that a watch, if this is your thing.
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit mikhila.substack.com/subscribe -
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit mikhila.substack.com
I was a bad first wife to my first husband. Almost 20 years later, I can see why.
- Visa fler