I think 64Fordman puts it wonderfully. I agree with him one-hundred percent.
I think the suggestions "to be you" that people give are not strong advice. It's not wrong, but it's not terribly helpful. I mean, you can't
be anyone but you. Even if you were trying to copy Lobo's style, if you didn't outright plagiarize him, you'd still be you.
There is no method to "being you", no process you can follow, and no way to check whether you are succeeding at it, because you can't fail, you can only be you. If the advice was not to censor yourself, or to have fun, then it would be more concrete, but still not super-useful, because it's really hard to tell where self-censorship ends and editing begins. Also, personally, I rarely have fun writing, because when I am doing it best, I'm not even conscious I exist. I get my fun later.
There is a nice book. "Fierce on the Page", that you can look up on Amazon, or wherever, and it offers advice on how to "be you", or maybe on "how to be a better you," which I think is worthwhile. If you want to be you, but better, it's worth a read. I'm not sure it helps writing specifically, but it did cheer me up.
If you want to tell a story that people will want to read, then you need to come up with writing good enough to hook readers in so they can't stop. Maybe you can do that with ten pages of set-up, but if you're not that good, maybe you should try something easier, such as starting with some interesting event, and telling a story where something compelling happens as often as possible, and letting us discover the details behind it as we go along.
Personally, I'm terrible at doing all that. In fact, I have a story ready to post to Gromet that really has ten pages of set-up, sort of. But I'm not asking for advice. I
got the advice and now I'm willfully ignoring it. This is probably why Steve Spandex has about a thousand readers for every one of mine. But I can't fix that. I can only be me
And you can't be either of us. You can only be you...