Zeal Monday Reset | You Don’t Have to Monetize Every Talent: Protect Your Joy

Published 5 months ago4 minute read
Owobu Maureen
Owobu Maureen
Zeal Monday Reset | You Don’t Have to Monetize Every Talent: Protect Your Joy

It started with something small.

A girl who loved to sketch on the corners of her school notebooks—faces, shapes, random flowers. It calmed her. She never called herself an artist; she just knew that drawing helped her breathe on days when the world felt too loud.

Then one day, someone said,
You’re so good—you should sell these.
And that innocent praise turned a quiet joy into a silent burden.

Suddenly, she was looking for ways to package, post, and promote. “Should I open an Instagram page?” “What’s a good price for my work?” “How do I ship across states?”

Within weeks, the joy was gone.
The pencil felt heavier.
She hadn’t drawn in days.

She told herself she was just “figuring things out.” But really, she was grieving. Something pure had been taken and turned into something performative.

And this isn’t just her story. It’s ours.

The Pressure to Monetize Everything

Across Africa, our generation is carrying the weight of turning every gift into a gig. You dance well? Make it a brand. You can sew? Start a fashion line. You make people laugh? You better be monetizing that content.

The lines betweentalent and trade have blurred so much that we now struggle to see value in anything that doesn't earn money.

Photo Credit: Pinterest

This isn’t about ambition—it’s about survival in an unforgiving economy. When the cost of living rises faster than the minimum wage, and job markets are flooded with millions of unemployed graduates, every skill becomes a possible lifeline.

But the more we turn passion into performance, the more we lose something sacred. Not everything you love is meant to be monetized. Not every gift needs an audience. Some talents exist simply to give you peace, not to earn you profit.

The Silent Death of Joy

There’s a kind of grief that comes with commercializing your joy. You don’t even realize it’s happening at first.

The songs you used to sing in the shower now need a “clean version” for streaming.
The food you loved to cook has become content.
The stories you once told with heart now feel like strategy.

Even rest begins to feel like wasted time. Because if it’s not part of the brand, is it even worth doing?

Eventually, you stop showing up—not because you’ve outgrown the passion, but because capitalism taught you to see your talent as a transaction. If it can’t generate value, it doesn’t deserve your time.

But that’s a lie.
One that’s robbing us of beauty.

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What They Don’t Tell You About “Doing What You Love”

“Turn your passion into a paycheck,” they said.
But what they didn’t say is that money complicates love.

Suddenly, you’re not just baking—you’re managing orders.
You’re not just drawing—you’re tracking engagement.
You’re not just dancing—you’re chasing views.

You become your employer, your marketing team, and your accountant. You spend more time selling than creating. More time strategizing than enjoying.

And slowly, the joy fades.

It’s Okay to Keep Some Things Just for You

Here’s the truth:
Not everything has to be a hustle.

You’re allowed to have hobbies that don’t earn you a kobo.
You’re allowed to enjoy music without recording it.
You’re allowed to paint without opening a shop.
You’re allowed to do something and never post it.

Your talent is still valid. Your joy is still real. Even if it’s quiet. Even if it’s unseen.

Especially when it’s just for you.

Photo Credit: Pinterest

Reclaiming Sacred Space

Capitalism teaches us to squeeze value out of everything we touch. But your peace is not a product. Your happiness is not a pitch.

Sometimes, the most radical thing you can do in a world obsessed with monetization is to create just for the sake of it.

Sing in your room. Dance in the mirror. Write love poems that no one will ever read. Cook food for yourself and let it end there. Let joy be joy again—unpackaged, unpriced, unperformed.

Protect it.

Because when the world feels heavy, it won’t be your followers, your profits, or your packaging that saves you—it’ll be the simple, silent joys you never sold.

This Monday, Let This Be Your Reset

You don’t need to make every gift make sense.
You don’t have to justify what brings you peace.
You don’t need a product plan to enjoy your passion.

This week, choose softness.
Let one thing stay yours.
Unshared. Unmonetized. Untouched by pressure.

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Because sometimes, joy doesn’t need a reason. It just needs room.

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