

Is it supposed to feel this lonely?
— all of us, at some point in our creative journey. For filmmakers, photographers, editors, writers, and visual storytellers who know how much time, emotion, and attention can live behind a single piece of work.
Even among creators, the creative process can feel deeply isolating.
A lot of creators are surrounded by people all the time, online, in coworking spaces, in creative cities and still quietly feel disconnected from the deeper parts of what they make. Because creative work can look very different from person to person. Some creators are drawn to story-driven work. The kind where you spend hours thinking about shots, rewriting scripts, filming with intention, searching for the right music, and sitting in the edit for days trying to make everything flow emotionally. And because so much of that process happens quietly inside your own head, it can be difficult to find people who naturally understand why those details matter so much. Not just professionally. But emotionally, too.

Loneliness shouldn’t be part of the process.
The Lonely Creator Club exists to change that.
We're still slowly shaping what this space could become.
But over time, we hope it grows into things like:
Small creator circles
Private spaces to talk honestly about creative work, burnout, unfinished ideas, internet life, and the emotional side of making things online.

Thoughtful conversations between creators
Relaxed online gatherings with filmmakers, photographers, writers, editors, and storytellers from different backgrounds and parts of the world.
Storytelling workshops
Sessions focused on creating more emotionally resonant work — from visual storytelling and pacing to scripting, editing, atmosphere, and meaning.
Creative feedback sessions
A place to share unfinished videos, drafts, concepts, photographs, or ideas with people who genuinely understand the process behind making them.
Retreats in Thailand and beyond
Slower in-person experiences centered around creativity, reflection, nature, conversation, and stepping away from the pressure of constantly being online.

Deeper discussions around creative life online
Honest conversations about ambition, loneliness, identity, attention, creative pressure, and what it means to spend so much of life on the internet while still trying to make meaningful work.
Who is this for?
