The Accidental Artist: A Life Built on Instinct


The Accidental Artist: A Life Built on Instinct

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I could have put my blog anywhere—including my own website or another writing platform—but I chose this as a way to familiarize myself with Web3 and experiment with a different kind of creative control.
It can’t be deleted.
No ads, no algorithms messing with what you see.
Web3 is somewhat designed to avoid spam, bots or faked stuff (big selling point for me tbh)
I own my content, permanently.
As a performer, I know how fragile creative work can be. Platforms change, rules change, and sometimes, entire accounts disappear overnight * ahem * meta censorship...
This is different—it exists on a system that can't just vanish. Why can't it vanish like the others? That's kind of the beauty and the complexity of it, which is a post for another day, but for now:
Do you need to understand Web3 to read this?
No. It’s just a blog. You can read it like any other website.
Why does this matter?
Right now, this is just a space where I can write and share without worrying about platform changes. But over time, I want to experiment with a different kind of access—not a traditional paywall, but something more interactive.
Imagine if instead of paying, you unlocked more content by learning something and proving you learned it. A way to engage that’s based on curiosity and participation rather than just transactions. And for those who simply find it interesting, there’s always a way to support if they want to be part of it.
And there’s something else—something about being able to show, without question, that an idea, a creation, a moment started here. More on that later.
For now, it’s just a blog. But if you’re curious, I’ll share more about why this matters to me (should matter to artists) over time.
I could have put my blog anywhere—including my own website or another writing platform—but I chose this as a way to familiarize myself with Web3 and experiment with a different kind of creative control.
It can’t be deleted.
No ads, no algorithms messing with what you see.
Web3 is somewhat designed to avoid spam, bots or faked stuff (big selling point for me tbh)
I own my content, permanently.
As a performer, I know how fragile creative work can be. Platforms change, rules change, and sometimes, entire accounts disappear overnight * ahem * meta censorship...
This is different—it exists on a system that can't just vanish. Why can't it vanish like the others? That's kind of the beauty and the complexity of it, which is a post for another day, but for now:
Do you need to understand Web3 to read this?
No. It’s just a blog. You can read it like any other website.
Why does this matter?
Right now, this is just a space where I can write and share without worrying about platform changes. But over time, I want to experiment with a different kind of access—not a traditional paywall, but something more interactive.
Imagine if instead of paying, you unlocked more content by learning something and proving you learned it. A way to engage that’s based on curiosity and participation rather than just transactions. And for those who simply find it interesting, there’s always a way to support if they want to be part of it.
And there’s something else—something about being able to show, without question, that an idea, a creation, a moment started here. More on that later.
For now, it’s just a blog. But if you’re curious, I’ll share more about why this matters to me (should matter to artists) over time.
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