[Communication] Google lets the world see me

Author: JEFFI CHAO HUI WU

Time: 2025-7-17 Thursday, 10:08 PM

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[Communication] Google lets the world see me

I never thought that Google would "recommend" for me.

It wasn't me who sought it out, nor did I place ads, do SEO optimization, or actively submit links or structured data. Yet it repeatedly included, displayed, and even ranked my articles on the homepage without my knowledge—it's as if it was "silently observing" and ultimately chose me.

I never consider "search engine friendliness" when writing articles; I don't even know what SEO means. My website structure is an outdated PHPBB forum from 2001, with no push functionality, no RSS subscription, and no sitemap (sitemap.xml). From a web standards perspective, it might be the most "unfriendly" platform.

But on such a platform, over the past three weeks, I have successively published more than 200 original articles on the forum, writing almost every morning and updating daily. The topics span martial arts, health preservation, dimensions, philosophy, education... Almost every article contains my personal experiences and genuine logic.

At first, I didn't pay attention to the whereabouts of these articles. It wasn't until one day when my friend told me, "I found your article on Google!" that I realized for the first time that what I had written had been recognized by the search engine system as "worthy of display."

I verify repeatedly.

Not only this one, but I will continue to publish articles in the next few days. Soon, several more will appear on Google within 20 hours and 36 hours. Some articles were even crawled by both bots, with entire paragraphs displayed in the summaries.

What shocked me the most was: I didn't tell it who I am, nor did I provide any external links for recommendations. My article title does not cater to trending search terms, the paragraphs are not SEO templates, and the forum did not add any schema.org structured markup.

But it has come.

It is not that I "attract" it, but rather it "recognizes" me—recognizes the structure, rhythm, content density, and value density behind this article of mine.

I understand that this is not due to any "special privileges" I have, but rather: my content itself meets the recognition standards that it has been trained on for a long time.

In the past, people always thought that Google would only recommend "pages with good technology and optimization." But I have personally verified this time: as long as you write correctly, write genuinely, have a clear structure, and sufficient density, it will eventually find you on its own.

In these three weeks, I did not use any SEO tools, did not actively submit articles to search platforms even once, and did not deliberately design keywords. I simply woke up every day at dawn, sat in front of the screen, and recorded word by word what I had experienced over the years—from practicing horse stance for thirty minutes, to sweating while training at five in the morning, from the loneliness of publishing at the beginning of the forum, to the accumulation of traces over twenty years in the Australian literary scene.

Every paragraph I write is not a template copy, but something that truly happened.

I didn't buy trending topics, didn't invest in platforms, and didn't promote on social media. I just quietly wrote in an old forum, which isn't even well-suited for mobile devices. Yet these articles, one after another, were actively displayed and automatically recommended by search engines.

Why does Google recommend me?

I think the answer might be very simple:

Because these articles have structure, rhythm, and power. They are not packaged viral copy, but rather real experiences that have been distilled over time.

In the past, people believed that recommendations had to be "pushed hard." But my experience tells me: if you write well, the platform will come naturally.

It's like practicing martial arts; it's not about desperately throwing punches to unblock your energy and blood flow; rather, it's about standing firm in your stance, allowing the energy to circulate naturally, and when it's unblocked, there is no pain.

Writing is the same—it’s not about chasing trends or algorithms to have a chance to be seen by the world. Instead, it’s about continuously accumulating and repeatedly refining, until the system recognizes you as that “unique signal.”

These few real events are the entire reason for "Google recommended it to me":

I didn't seek it; it sought me.

I didn't use optimization; it captures my main text.

I didn't invest any resources; it displays automatically.

Someone asked me, "Did you use some kind of technology?"

I smiled and said, "The technique I use is called — reality."

If you also want the system to see you, perhaps you don't need to study "how to optimize" anymore. What you really should do is to solidly write down the content in your heart that hasn't been expressed yet, with clear structure, accurate rhythm, and authenticity.

The strongest recommendation system in the world is not driven by people, but by the natural emergence of value.

Google doesn't "help me," it just recognizes me.

Because of it, I finally saw myself. It allowed more people in the world to see me!

Source: http://www.australianwinner.com/AuWinner/viewtopic.php?t=696905