Tired of every writing guru offering conflicting advice? They say: Write what you love. No, write to market. Pick one genre. Diversify. Maybe you've tried an approach and readers love those stories—but you hate writing them. Or maybe you've tried them all with little success. Here's what every guru misses: their approach fails if you don't write with authenticity and emotional resonance. I get it. But telling you to write what matters to you is confusing because the phrase doesn’t mean what you think.
Your Roadmap
This process works best when your timeline looks similar to this:
- Week 1: Complete all the mining exercises without judging the results
- Week 2: Choose your strongest emotional material and practice the distance techniques
- Week 3: Translate one experience into three different story scenarios
- Week 4: Write a scene from your strongest scenario and test it with a beta reader
Don't rush this. Authentic writing develops over time as you get comfortable accessing and translating your emotional truth.
What “Write What Matters to You" Actually Means
The biggest misconception about what an authentic story is that it must be based on a literal experience, an autobiographical retelling.
It's Not Just Autobiography
If writing stories that matter to you means they must be based on literal personal experience, take a step back and look again. Just think how limited our stories would be if we only wrote things from "real life."
Then if it's not literal experiences, what creates a meaningful story? The answer lies in emotional truths and five types of personal connections that tap into emotions we all feel in our lives.
Emotional Truth vs. Factual Truth
Fictional stories aren’t meaningful because of factual accuracy but from the heartfelt feelings expressed through the story. More than the specific action, plot, or characters, a story's meaning is in the themes, the emotions and the questions raised.
You don't owe readers your literal experiences. Focus on capturing the heart of your feelings rather than factual details. Give yourself permission to lie about everything except feelings. The childhood terror of hearing your parents fight at 2 AM can become a space station crew facing system failures in the dark. Different facts, same fear of powerlessness and impending disaster.
Remember, as a fiction writer, you’re not writing your memoir or autobiography. You are a translator of real human emotions into stories that fulfill your readers’ needs, whether that’s entertainment, escape, or understanding.
Personal Connection
Every human on Earth has emotions, values and beliefs, persistent questions, fascinations and experiences with injustice. These connect us. They cross genders, cultures, nationalities, and genres. And it's not just big emotions—it's the complexity, the contradictory feelings that push and pull us—and make us human. (Yes, there are exceptions, but these connections apply to most people.)
Example:
On the surface, Iron Man is a superhero movie filled with over-the-top action scenes. None of us believe the Iron Man is real. And if the story were only about the Iron Man's superhuman feats, it would be entertaining, but it would not be the same story. It’s Tony Stark's transformation from arrogant rich boy inventor to a hero protecting others from harm that plucks our heartstrings. The emotional impact of his near-death experience challenges his arrogance and forces him to face the devastation his weapons wreak on people, which becomes the source of his deep, unrelenting guilt, which motivates him to be more selfless. Yet, his arrogance remains a challenge for him in later stories, and each time he confronts it, he learns to see the larger picture and to grow from this knowledge. The story speaks to the universal desire for the courage to face one's own worst self and become a better person. Notice how the writers didn’t need to experience weapon-manufacturing guilt. They understood the genuine emotion of realizing your life’s work has hurt people, and used that to tell the story of the billionaire named Tony Stark.
So how do you systematically find these connections in your own life? There are specific areas where everyone has material worth mining.
Types of Personal Connections
There are five basic areas in your life that you can mine for story ideas:
Emotional experiences grief, triumph, betrayal, discovery, alienation from others—your experience is the starting point.
Core values and beliefs help you understand why those emotions matter—what was threatened or affirmed.
Persistent questions come from your inner tension between what happened and what you believe should happen.
Fascinations often point to the genres or themes where you can best explore these questions.
Injustices provide the outside problems that make rankle you.
Now that you know the five connection types, let’s address your concerns about marketing realities and sharing too much.
Balancing Genuine Feelings with Marketing Realities
This doesn’t mean ignoring your audience or genre expectations. How do you balance the two? Find where your real-life emotions overlap with themes your readers crave. Romance readers want stories about vulnerability and trust. These are emotions you can mine even if you’ve never experienced lost love or a love triangle. Thriller readers want stories about betrayal and survival. You might have experienced these feelings during a difficult job situation or friendship.
Ask yourself:
What emotions does my chosen genre explore? Then, look at your personal connections to see which ones naturally fit. Don’t force a mismatch. And don’t assume your emotions won’t work.
Using Personal Connections without Being Too Personal
If you think your life isn't interesting enough or something is too personal to share, you're taking the idea of using personal connection too literally. Personal connections can open truly meaningful story material by giving you access to genuine emotions. More than that, instead of being limited to what actually happened to you, you can explore those emotional connections through any setting, time period, character, or genre you choose.
Example:
Say you're haunted by a moment when you realized your parents weren't the heroes you thought they were. You don't write about your specific disillusionment—your dad's gambling or your mother's drinking. Instead, you might create a historical story where a deputy who idolizes his boss learns the sheriff is on the take. Or you could create a fantasy about an apprentice to the wizard who is secretly controlling the evil overlord. The same deep feelings of betrayal and shattered trust in a completely different context.
Even if you never had anything "interesting" happen, you had some pivotal event(s) and feelings or values that came from that event. Maybe you were ten and your parents had another baby. Or you got a haircut you didn't like. The events themselves do not have to be exotic or exciting.
Tapping into one or all five connection types offers rich material for authentic storytelling, regardless of your genre or writing style. The key is to recall pivotal moments in your life and to identify the gut feelings you had at the time of the event.
Mining Your Life for Story Material
You might be thinking, 'This sounds great in theory, but where do I actually find this meaningful material in my own life?' The truth is, you already have everything you need. The experiences, values, and emotions that will fuel your most authentic stories are already there—you just need the right tools to uncover them.
The Experience Inventory
To uncover authentic emotions from your life, list positive and negative experiences without judgment. These can be big emotion moments or a mundane experience that sticks with you. How do you uncover these?
Try this:
- Set a timer for 15 minutes.
- List experiences that still trigger emotions when you remember them.
- Include three categories: moments of intense feelings, times your values were tested, and situations that still puzzle you.
- Write one sentence about how it felt in your body.
You’ll end up with a mix of big and small moments that still have an emotional charge. Once you have identified your authentic material through these exercises, the next challenge is turning personal emotions into storytelling fiction. For the next part, choose your three strongest reactions for the next step.
Find the Universal in the Personal
Now you'll identify the emotions associated with that experience. Yes, I said emotions plural. Emotions are complex. They grow out of our cultural expectations, environmental influences, parental examples, our personal history, our individual personalities, and the unique details of the situation. We often think of emotions as something in our hearts or in our minds, but emotions are psychological, behavioral, and physical.
Dig a little deeper and for each experience:
- Write a sentence about what you wanted in the moment
- Write about what you were afraid would happen next.
Dig deep. Use the granular details of your experience as the foundation for your character and her reactions, and it will resonate with your readers regardless of genre or setting.
Ask:
"What was this really about?" for each of your three strongest reactions.
For example: getting lost as a child might really be about trust, independence, or fear of abandonment. Winning the science fair in fifth grade might be about self-esteem or proving yourself to your parents or teachers or a desire to make your parents happy.
Create Distance for Perspective
Most of us can't be clear-headed about the positive or negative events in our lives. But in order to write effective and compelling scenes, we need to be able to remove ourselves from the emotions we wish to mine. Need more distance?
Try one or more of these exercises:
- Change the character's gender, age, the time period, or genre.
- Brainstorm metaphors or symbols that represent those experiences.
- Try writing the experience with elements from fantasy such as witches and warlocks or swordsmen and women or dragons.
- Change the setting to another planet or spaceship or change to a culture or country that is quite different from your own.
If those exercises give you story ideas, wonderful. Keep writing. Or, if you've gotten the distance you needed to treat your character and story as something other than yourself, you can return to your original setting and characters with a fresh perspective.
Values-Based Story Generation

Another way to mine your life for story material is to identify your top five core values. What are values, you ask?
The Merriam-Webster Dictionary defines values as "something (such as a principle or quality) intrinsically valuable or desirable."
To clarify what your values are:
- Set a timer for 15 minutes.
- List what makes you genuinely angry (not annoyed—angry).
- List what you’d fight to protect
- Identify your top five core values from these lists.
Don't worry if it seems you have conflicting values or beliefs. We humans are complex creatures full of contradictions. Besides, conflicting values or deeply held beliefs that cause guilt or indecision and internal or external pressure create compelling stories.
Dig a little deeper:
- Create a situation where these values are tested, threatened, or triumphant.
- Create characters who represent or test these values.
The "What If" Bridge
Your fascination with questions that don't have an answer can power a story that explores the question. Questions like: Is there such a thing as free will? What is love? Is true justice possible? Use the question that nags you when you can't sleep or you're bored and supply your characters with the conflicting answers. Stories that ask these questions without coming to a conclusive answer are often very powerful.
How do you get started? Take real emotions/situations and ask, "What if this happened in a different world/time/circumstance?"
Example:
You feel overlooked at work—colleagues ignore your suggestions, you’re not invited to important meetings, etc. Now ask, “What if?” What if a character could literally become invisible but discovers that being unseen is worse than being ignored? What if a whole society of invisible people existed? What if becoming visible again required facing exactly why you wanted to disappear? Same emotional starting point, multiple story possibilities.
Excavating Childhood Obsessions
Rediscovering the things you were obsessed with as a child may provide your writer brain with rich story materials.
List five things you loved before the age of twelve. For each, ask: what emotional need did this fill? For example:
- dinosaurs and dragons (the need to feel powerful when the world sees you as helpless and small),
- building forts (the need to feel safe when your environment is unsafe)
- collecting and organizing things (the need to control small pieces of the world when everything feels chaotic).
Once you’ve identified your childhood obsession and its emotional need, ask:
- How do I seek the same feeling today?
- When do I feel most frustrated in adult life? (Often, that indicates a need isn’t being met.)
- What could happen to a character if that need was threatened or completely fulfilled?
Your childhood obsession can become your emotional GPS for writing stories with themes and conflicts that will always matter to you as a writer and ultimately to your readers as well.
Crafting Authentic Stories from Personal Material
Once you've identified your most powerful emotional material, you face a new challenge: How do you turn deeply personal experiences into universal stories that resonate with readers who haven't lived your specific life? The answer lies in learning to be both vulnerable and strategic in your storytelling choices.
Avoiding the Therapy Session Trap
Stories aren't journals—they need structure, conflict, and resolution. Transform personal pain into character arcs that both reach into the reader’s heart and serve the story, not just your healing process. Guideline: If it was only meaningful to you, it's not ready to be a story yet.
The difference? A journal entry says, "My divorce was devastating." A story shows a character discovering strength they never knew they had when forced to rebuild their life from scratch. Same emotional territory, but one serves readers while the other only serves you.
The Character Filter Method
Instead of writing about yourself, create characters who face your fears or embody your questions. Give them different backgrounds, personalities, and choices than you'd make. Let them teach you something new about your own experiences.
This isn't about hiding from your emotions—it's about exploring them through fresh perspectives. When your protagonist makes choices you never would, you discover new aspects of the situation that your personal involvement originally blinded you to.
Creating distance through characters is just the first step. You also need to ensure your personal material connects with readers who haven't lived your specific experiences.
Balancing Personal and Universal
Start with what matters to you, then find ways to make readers care too. Include relatable human experiences alongside your unique perspective. Use beta readers to test the success of your story’s emotions: Do they connect emotionally, even if they haven't shared your specific experience?
The goal isn't for readers to have lived your life. It's for them to recognize the emotions you've translated into fiction and think, "Yes, I know exactly what that feels like," even if their version happened completely differently.
Warning Signs
The warning signs that you're too close to your material: you write long backstory explanations that don't advance the plot. Your character makes only the choices you made, with the same reasoning you used. You get defensive when readers don't interpret scenes the way you intended. When this happens, step back and create more distance using the techniques above.
The Passion Test
If you could write only one more story, what would it be about? That answer reveals what truly matters to you as a writer.
Signs you're not writing what matters:
- boredom during writing
- forcing yourself to continue
- caring more about word count than story quality.
Making This Work Across Genres
Focusing on genuine emotions will work in every genre. Here are a few examples:
Literary Fiction: focuses on emotional experiences and persistent questions. Your character's internal journey mirrors your own emotional discoveries.
Romance: mine your core values about relationships and your fascinations with connection. The external plot comes from threatening those values.
Thriller/Mystery: use your experiences with injustice and your fears. What makes you feel powerless? That's your character's external threat.
Fantasy/Sci-Fi: Your fascinations become world-building elements. Your persistent questions become the philosophical core that grounds fantastical elements in human truth.
Understanding how this works across genres is helpful, but you also need to recognize when you are successfully writing from your core emotions.
How You’ll Know It’s Working
Even when you know you’re doing these exercises for story ideas, it’s often difficult work that can feel disconnected from your actual writing. But there are ways to know.
Signs you’re writing authentically:
- You feel energized during writing sessions instead of drained
- You discover new things about your character mid-scene.
- Beta readers use emotion words in feedback (heartbreaking, inspiring, thrilling, I felt that)
- You write longer than planned because you’re engaged
- Readers mention specific moments or scenes that “felt real.”
Just as there are signs it’s working, there are warning signs.
Signs you’ve drifted away from the genuine emotions:
- Writing feels like you’re going through the motions
- You’re checking word count more than story progress
- Characters feel like puppets saying and doing what you say
- Beta readers say things like, “Well-written but didn’t connect with me.”
Overcoming Common Obstacles
Even when you develop a solid understanding of these techniques, you may hit some predictable obstacles. Here are the most common ones and how to push through them.
You Feel Stuck
It’s okay. We all get stuck. Look at why you’re stuck and what you can do to get unstuck.
For example:
- Problem: Nothing feels story-worthy.
- Solution: You’re judging too quickly. Take your most “boring” experience and ask: what was at stake emotionally? A bad haircut might reveal fears about acceptance or identity.
- Problem: My authentic emotions don’t fit my genre
- Solution: You may be focusing on surface tropes rather than underlying themes. Every genre explores human emotions. Look deeper at your genre to find the themes and what emotions are behind it.
- Problem: I have lots of emotions, but I can’t turn them into a story.
- Solution: You’re skipping the translation step. Don’t recreate the experience—go back through the steps outlined in “Balancing Personal and Universal.”
My Life Isn't Interesting Enough
Every life contains universal human experiences. Ordinary moments often resonate more than dramatic ones. The quiet devastation of realizing your best friend has been talking behind your back hits harder than most thriller plots because everyone has felt that betrayal.
Stop measuring your experiences against movie plots. Start measuring them against human truth.
It's Too Personal to Share
You control how much to reveal through fiction techniques. Start with safer material and build courage. Remember, readers respond to emotional honesty, not the facts of your life story. You can write about abandonment without revealing who abandoned you or when.
Fear of Judgment
Remember: opening up to your emotions creates a connection with your readers. Your specific truth will resonate with someone who needs to hear it. The stories that feel most risky to share are often the ones that help others feel less alone.
Writing with Purpose

Meaningful stories come from a genuine connection with your own experiences and values. Readers sense when you care about what you're writing—passion is contagious, and authenticity is magnetic. When you write from your emotional core, you give readers permission to care deeply too.
The stories only you can tell are the ones the world needs most. Not because your experiences are unique, but because your particular way of understanding and translating human experience through fiction is one-of-a-kind. Every reader who connects with your authentic voice is finding a piece of themselves reflected back—and that's the real magic of stories that matter.
Your Next Step
But understanding this magic isn't enough. You have everything you need—now you need to act.
Start with one small thing that matters to you and build from there. Maybe it's a moment of unexpected kindness from a stranger, or the weight of keeping a family secret, or the specific loneliness of moving to a new city. Whatever it is, dig into the emotions beneath the facts.
Here's what to do right now: choose one exercise from this guide and complete it today. Set a timer for 15 minutes and begin with whichever exercise feels easiest. The Experience Inventory works well for most writers because everyone has experiences that still carry an emotional charge.
Once you've completed your first exercise, commit to the four-week timeline. Mark it on your calendar. Share it with an accountability partner.
Every day you postpone this work is another day those stories stay locked inside, unable to help the readers who need them most. Your authentic voice isn't just nice to have—it's essential. The world has enough generic stories. It needs yours.
Start today.
Do you find it harder to identify meaningful material from your own life, or to translate that material into compelling story scenarios once you've found it?
About Lynette

Lynette M. Burrows is an author, blogger, writing coach, and Yorkie wrangler. She survived moving seventeen times between kindergarten and her high school graduation. Her stories weave her experiences into speculative fiction stories that balance character growth with thrilling action and social themes.
Her Fellowship Dystopia series has been described as intense and gripping. Book One, My Soul to Keep, and Book Two, If I Should Die, are available at your favorite online book seller. Book Three, And When I Wake, will be published in late 2025.
When Lynette’s not writing she avoids housework and plays with her two yorkies. They live in Dorothy’s home state of Kansas. You can follow Lynette on her website or her Facebook page or Sign up for her newsletter.










