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✍️ Resetting After a Chaotic Week — Pink Eye, Cleaning, Missed Writing Goals & Learning to Pivot

This week did not go according to plan.

At all.

Between:

  • traveling for a concert
  • getting pink eye
  • dealing with exhaustion
  • preparing to potentially host a birthday party
  • worrying about my dog
  • thunderstorms
  • cleaning my entire downstairs
  • and falling behind on my writing goals…

it felt like life hit the fast-forward button and forgot to warn me first.

And yet somehow, in the middle of all of the chaos, I think I needed this reset more than I realized.


🎶 Traveling to See Electric Callboy

At the beginning of the week, we drove all the way to Greensboro to see Electric Callboy in concert.

The show was incredible.

The energy was insane, the performance was amazing, and it was one of those experiences where you leave feeling both exhausted and completely alive.

The only downside?

Driving all the way there… and then immediately driving all the way back home afterward.

It completely wiped me out.


👁 What I Thought Were Allergies… Was Pink Eye

In my previous vlog, I kept talking about how bad my allergies were.

Turns out:
✨ it was not allergies.
✨ it was pink eye.

Which explains a lot.

My eyes were watering nonstop, my eyes were crusty, and by the end of it, I had to throw away basically every makeup product that had touched my face during the contagious phase.

And let me tell you:
throwing away favorite makeup products is emotionally devastating.

Especially when you’re staring at half-used products thinking:

“We weren’t done.”


🐶 Meanwhile… My Dog Needed Vet Care Too

Because apparently the universe decided chaos wasn’t complete enough yet, Scout developed a cyst on her leg that needed treatment.

So on top of:

  • traveling
  • being sick
  • trying to write
  • and resetting my house…

I was also:

  • spraying antibacterial medication multiple times a day
  • scheduling follow-up appointments
  • and trying not to spiral over my poor dog looking miserable

It genuinely felt like everyone in the house was falling apart at the same time.


🧹 Why Writing Wasn’t the Priority This Week

Usually in my writing vlogs, the goal is always:
✨ get words written
✨ hit the daily word count
✨ make progress on Project Ember

But this week the goal was survival.
And cleaning.

Because sometimes life gets chaotic enough that your creative goals need to temporarily step aside while you reset your environment and your brain.

I had:

  • guests potentially coming over
  • a birthday celebration to prepare for
  • dishes piled up
  • clutter everywhere
  • and a house that desperately needed attention

So instead of forcing myself to chase 2,000 words immediately, I chose to focus on getting my space back under control first.

I think that was the right decision.


🌸 Introvert Recovery Mode

One thing I realized this week is just how overstimulated I was after all the travel and social interaction.

As an introvert, there’s a certain point where your brain just goes:

“Please stop talking to me.”

So while I cleaned, I threw on Bambi in the background.

Not because I needed to actively watch it, but because I needed something soft and comforting that didn’t demand anything from me emotionally.

Just:

  • pretty music
  • calming visuals
  • and quiet energy while I reset my space

That kind of cozy recovery day can be incredibly healing.


✨ Deep Cleaning as a Mental Reset

I spent about an hour:

  • doing dishes
  • cleaning the kitchen
  • sanitizing the bathroom
  • resetting the living room
  • and slowly trying to calm the chaos around me

And something about cleaning after a chaotic week always feels symbolic to me.

Like you’re not just cleaning your house.

You’re clearing mental clutter too.

By the time I finished, I felt so much lighter.

Not perfectly productive.
Not magically cured.
But calmer.

And sometimes that’s enough.


🎀 My Disney Tennis Dresses Arrived

In the middle of cleaning, I got surprised with a package:
Disney tennis dresses. ✨

And listen…
I am OBSESSED.

I ordered them because we’re going on a Disney cruise later this year, and I wanted cute, comfortable outfits for the trip.

The dresses had:

  • retro Mickey prints
  • built-in shorts
  • pockets (!!)
  • soft material
  • and the cutest nostalgic Disney vibes

Which honestly brought me so much joy after such a chaotic couple of weeks.

Sometimes tiny things really do help.


✍️ Writing Update: Only 400 Words

After all the cleaning and reorganizing, I finally sat down to write.

And I only wrote about 400 words.

Which is far below my usual:
✨ 2,000 word daily goal

I’m trying not to beat myself up over it.

Because this week was weird.

And I think there’s something important about learning how to recognize the difference between laziness and genuine exhaustion.

This wasn’t me avoiding my work.

This was me trying to recover physically, mentally, emotionally, and creatively all at once.


🌧 Why Travel Always Throws Off My Routine

One thing I noticed this week is how much traveling disrupts my rhythm.

Even fun travel.

Even exciting experiences.

When I get home after being away, I always feel like I need:

  • a reset day
  • a deep clean
  • a quiet morning
  • and some time to settle back into myself again

I don’t think productivity has to look perfectly linear all the time.


📖 Act III of Project Ember Is Taking Longer Than Expected

I’ll be honest.
Act III is humbling me.

According to my original timeline?
Draft 2 should technically already be finished.

But between:

  • illness
  • rewrites
  • emotional character arcs
  • and just life happening…

everything has shifted.

So after this vlog, I sat down to start reorganizing all of my deadlines inside monday.com and recalculating my projected finish date.

That’s part of the process too.


🎨 Why I Actually Love Editing

One thing I’m surprisingly excited about is the editing phase.

I know a lot of writers dread edits…

But I genuinely love them.

Drafting feels like:

  • sketching shapes
  • outlining trees
  • roughly painting the canvas

Editing is where the art really comes alive.

That’s where:

  • emotional depth sharpens
  • scenes become richer
  • lines get twisted into something unique
  • and the story transforms into what it was always meant to be

I even intentionally leave little “treasures” for myself in early drafts—placeholder phrases or clichés that trigger bigger, better ideas later during edits.

That process feels magical to me.


🌸 Learning to Pivot Instead of Panic

If this week taught me anything, it’s this:

✨ Sometimes you don’t need to panic.
✨ Sometimes you just need to pivot.

Not every week will be:

  • hyper productive
  • aesthetically perfect
  • creatively flowing
  • or perfectly on schedule

Sometimes life gets messy.

Sometimes your plans shift.

Sometimes your timeline changes.

And that does not mean you failed.

It just means you’re human.


💖 For Anyone Feeling Behind Right Now…

If you’ve had a chaotic week lately, this is your reminder:

You are allowed to:

  • rest
  • reset your home
  • adjust your goals
  • change your timeline
  • recover from sickness
  • and start again next week

Progress isn’t ruined by one difficult season.

Sometimes the most productive thing you can do is simply:
✨ take care of yourself and begin again. ✨

That’s exactly what I’m trying to do right now. 💖

✍️ Getting Unstuck in Act III of Project Ember — Creative Blocks, Character Depth & Trusting the Process

Act III is humbling me.

Not in the “I can’t write” kind of way.
Not in the “I have no ideas” kind of way.

But in the deeply frustrating, emotionally exhausting kind of way where:

  • the words are technically flowing
  • the story is moving forward
  • and yet something still feels… off.

This week has been all about trying to get unstuck while working through Act III of Project Ember, and honestly? It’s been harder than I expected.


🌧 Falling Behind on My Writing Goals

Going into this week, I had plans.

Big plans.

I wanted to power through Act III and make huge progress toward finishing Draft 2. But life had other ideas.

Between:

  • getting sick
  • dealing with my cycle
  • allergies turning into what I thought were allergies (spoiler: it was pink eye)
  • and just feeling physically drained…

I fell behind on my word count goals.

And as frustrating as that was, I’m trying to remind myself that creativity doesn’t happen in a vacuum.

We’re still human beings.

Sometimes your body forces you to slow down, whether you want to or not.


📖 The Goal Right Now: Just Finish Draft Two

One thing I’ve had to keep repeating to myself lately is:

✨ The goal is not perfection right now.
✨ The goal is to finish Draft 2.

Because every time I hit a scene that feels slightly off, my brain immediately wants to stop everything and fix it.

But that’s what Draft 3 is for.

Draft 3 will be:

  • deeper edits
  • stronger emotional arcs
  • fixing plot holes
  • restructuring scenes
  • strengthening themes
  • cutting unnecessary moments
  • expanding important ones

Right now?

I just need to get to the end.

It’s harder than it sounds.


💔 Why Act III Feels So Much Harder

Acts I and II flowed surprisingly smoothly for me.

Act III?
Act III is emotional warfare. 😩

The deeper I get into this section of the book, the more I realize this isn’t really a plot problem anymore.

It’s a character problem.

Or maybe more accurately:
✨ a character depth problem. ✨

I’m at a point where I need to dig deeper emotionally than I originally expected.

Not just:

  • what my characters want ➡️ but why they want it
  • what wounds are driving them
  • what fears they’re hiding
  • and how those things shape every decision they make

That level of emotional excavation is exhausting.


🌸 Writing Romance Is Harder When the Characters Are Apart

One thing I realized this week is that my male and female leads are currently separated in the story… and wow, I hate it.

Not because it’s bad storytelling.

But because they work so well together.

When they’re together:

  • the dialogue flows
  • the emotional tension crackles
  • scenes feel alive
  • their personalities bounce off each other naturally

When they’re apart?

Everything feels heavier.

More fractured.

And I think that discomfort is intentional.

Because part of romance storytelling is proving:
✨ they are better together than apart. ✨

But wow, does that make these chapters emotionally difficult to write.


🧠 It’s Not Writer’s Block… It’s Something Else

I kept calling this “writer’s block” in my head, but the truth is:

The words are coming.

The scenes exist.
The dialogue is flowing.
The story is moving forward.

So it’s not traditional writer’s block.

It’s more like:

  • creative resistance
  • emotional overwhelm
  • uncertainty
  • trying to pry deeper truths out of the characters

And I think sometimes writers don’t talk enough about that distinction.

Sometimes you’re not blocked because you lack ideas.

Sometimes you’re blocked because the story is asking more from you emotionally than you expected.


🌲 Taking a Break to Reset My Brain

At a certain point, I realized I needed to stop forcing it.

So I grabbed Scout and took her on an off-leash hike through the woods.

It honestly helped so much.

There’s something about getting outside, moving your body, and stepping away from the screen that helps your brain breathe again.

Scout absolutely loved it, too.

We skipped the regular dog park area and headed straight for the trails—her favorite part. Watching her run through the woods felt like a reminder that sometimes creativity needs space to roam a little, too.


📝 Realistic Writer Life = Adjusting the Plan

When I got home, I sat down with my Daily Grind Planner and started mapping out the rest of my day.

And almost immediately, I realized:
✨ I wasn’t going to get as much writing done as I wanted.

Because life still needed to happen.

We had friends coming over.
The house needed cleaning.
There were responsibilities outside of writing.

That’s real life.

I think sometimes we romanticize the creative process so much that we forget artists still have dishes to wash, errands to run, and homes to take care of.

Balance matters too.


✍️ Small Progress Still Counts

By the end of the day, I finished Chapter 28 and started Chapter 29.

Did I hit the massive word count I originally wanted?

No.

But I still wrote around 1,000 words.

And I’m trying to celebrate that instead of criticizing myself for not doing more.

Because progress is still progress.

Especially during the emotionally heavy parts of a story.


💭 Discovering New Depth in My Characters

One of the most surprising things about writing Act III has been realizing:
✨ my characters are deeper than I originally thought. ✨

There are emotional layers surfacing now that I didn’t fully understand in earlier drafts.

And while that’s making the writing process harder…

It’s also making the story better.

Because these aren’t just characters moving through plot points anymore.

They’re becoming real people.

Flawed people.
Hurting people.
Complicated people.

And I think that’s where stories truly start to come alive.


🌸 For Anyone Feeling Creatively Stuck Right Now…

If you’re in the middle of a creative project and feeling frustrated, overwhelmed, or emotionally drained by it, here’s your reminder:

✨ Struggling does not mean you’re failing.
✨ Slow progress is still progress.
✨ Creative blocks don’t mean you’re not talented.
✨ Sometimes the hard parts of a project are what make it meaningful.

And maybe most importantly:

You are allowed to step away, reset, go outside, breathe, and come back to your art later.

Sometimes clarity comes after the pause.

Not during the panic.


Thank you for following along with my journey through Project Ember. Even in the messy, emotionally chaotic middle of Act III, I’m still incredibly grateful to be building this story—and this dream—one chapter at a time. 💖

✍️ Starting Act III of Project Ember — Plot Holes, Perfectionism & the Reality of Rewriting a Novel

There’s a strange feeling that comes with reaching the final act of a novel draft.

There’s excitement. Panic. A bit of, “how did I even get here?”

This week, I officially started Act III of Project Ember Draft 2, and while I thought I was stepping into the home stretch… the story had other plans.

Because apparently the universe decided that right as I entered the final act of my romantasy novel, it was time for:

  • plot holes
  • magic system problems
  • emotional devastation
  • a completely broken outline
  • and a very humbling reminder that writing books is chaos.

So let’s talk about it.


📖 Starting Act III of Draft 2

At the end of my last writing vlog, I officially wrapped up Act II of Project Ember.

Which meant this week was all about diving into:
✨ Act III
✨ Chapter 26
✨ The final stretch of Draft 2

For months now, this story has consumed my brain in the best possible way. I’ve rewritten massive sections, completely changed the book’s direction, and rebuilt the world from the ground up.

So realizing I’m finally nearing the end of Draft 2 feels bittersweet.

Because now the real work begins.


⚡ The Problem With Magic Systems

The moment I sat down to work on Act III, I realized something horrifying:

✨ I found a plot hole.

Not a tiny one.
A magic-system-level plot hole.

And if you write fantasy, you know exactly how terrifying that is.

Fantasy worlds are built on rules.

You create systems. Boundaries. Costs. Consequences.

And in Project Ember, one of the biggest themes revolves around:

  • immortality vs mortality
  • magical limitations
  • how power affects people over time

Which means that if one piece doesn’t line up correctly… the entire structure suddenly starts wobbling.

Thankfully, the issue mostly impacts Draft 3 rather than the current draft, so I can continue moving forward. But it definitely reminded me that writing fantasy isn’t just storytelling.

Sometimes it feels like solving a giant puzzle while blindfolded.


🌸 This Story Has Changed So Much

One of the biggest realizations I had this week is just how different Project Ember has become from the original concept.

The very first version of this story was:

  • a Cinderella retelling
  • revenge-focused
  • much smaller in scope

Now?

It’s evolved into something bigger:
⚔️ knights
🔥 battle scenes
✨ magic
🗡 adventure
💔 emotional trauma
🌌 deeper worldbuilding

I’m so glad I gave myself permission to pivot.

Because the old version wasn’t bad, but this version feels alive.


💭 Missing My Deadline (And Why That’s Okay)

At the beginning of the year, I gave myself a goal:

✨ Finish Project Ember and have it agent-ready by May.

And technically, I missed that deadline.

A few months ago, that would have devastated me.

But now I see it differently.

Because halfway through writing this book, I realized:

“I can do better.”

And instead of forcing myself to push forward with a version of the story that no longer felt right, I stopped and rewrote huge portions of it from scratch.

That wasn’t a failure.

That was growth.

That was trusting my instincts as a writer.

And I genuinely believe this newer version of Project Ember will be far stronger because of it.


📝 My Draft Plan Going Forward

Right now, the plan looks something like this:

✍️ Draft 2

Finish the story from beginning to end.

🔍 Draft 3

Fix plot holes, deepen scenes, strengthen pacing, and smooth out the manuscript.

📚 Beta Readers

Send Draft 3 out for feedback and critiques.

✨ Draft 4

Implement feedback and prepare the manuscript for querying literary agents.

It’s a much longer process than I originally imagined, but that’s okay.

Books take time.

Good books, especially.


📊 How I’m Organizing My Writing Life

One thing that’s been helping me immensely lately is using monday.com to manage my writing timelines.

I know a lot of writers love Notion, but personally?
It’s too unstructured for my brain.

I need:

  • deadlines
  • timelines
  • chapter tracking
  • progress markers
  • visual workflows

Right now I’m using it to organize:

  • Draft 2 chapters
  • beta reading timelines
  • Draft 3 edits
  • YouTube content
  • future writing projects

Because one thing I’ve learned is that creativity thrives when my systems are organized.


😅 The Outline Disaster

So here’s where things got truly chaotic.

I sat down to start Chapter 26…
looked over my outline…
and immediately realized:

✨ My entire Act III outline no longer worked. ✨

The ending of Act II changed too much.

Which meant:

  • scenes needed reordering
  • emotional beats shifted
  • pacing changed
  • entire sequences no longer made sense

So instead of drafting immediately, I had to stop and completely rebuild my outline first.

Ugh.

This is such a normal part of the writing process.

I’m very much a hybrid between a plotter and a pantser:

  • I outline heavily
  • but I also allow the story to evolve naturally

Which means every act tends to reshape the next one.

That’s the beauty (and chaos) of writing novels.


✍️ Writing the Darkest Part of the Book

By the end of the day, I managed to write over 3,000 words for Chapter 26.

But emotionally, this chapter was heavy.

We’re entering one of the darkest parts of Project Ember—the section where my female protagonist’s trauma finally comes to the surface in a major way.

And these are the hardest scenes for me to write.

Not because the writing itself is difficult…
But because I feel everything alongside the characters.

There were scenes in Draft 1 that genuinely made me cry while writing them, and now I have to revisit those emotions all over again in Draft 2.

But that emotional depth matters.

The heartbreak matters.

Because without it, later growth wouldn’t feel earned.


💖 The Reality of Writing a Novel

I think people sometimes imagine writing a book as this magical, aesthetic experience where inspiration constantly flows and every scene comes together beautifully.

But in reality?

Sometimes writing looks like:

  • rebuilding your outline halfway through the draft
  • questioning your magic system
  • staring at plot holes
  • washing dishes between writing sprints
  • emotionally damaging yourself for fictional people
  • and rewriting entire acts because your story has evolved

And somehow that’s still magic.


🌸 For Anyone Chasing a Creative Dream

If you’re working on something big right now—whether it’s a novel, a business, a creative project, or a dream life you’re trying to build—please remember:

✨ Missing a deadline does not mean you failed.
✨ Rewriting does not mean you’re going backward.
✨ Pivoting does not mean you made the wrong choice.

Sometimes growth looks messy.

Sometimes the better version of your dream takes longer to create.

And sometimes the most important thing you can do is trust yourself enough to start over when something no longer feels right.

Even when it’s scary.

Even when it delays the timeline.

Even when it means rebuilding the entire outline from scratch. 💖


If you want more behind-the-scenes writing content, cozy routines, and updates on Project Ember, make sure you’re subscribed to my newsletter and following along on YouTube. ✨

✍️ Finishing Act II of Project Ember While Battling Burnout, Congestion, and Perfectionism

There’s something totally unglamorous about building your dream life.

Sometimes it looks like cozy coffee shop writing sessions and aesthetic planners.
And other times?

It looks like writing through congestion, blowing your nose every five minutes, surviving on sheer determination, and trying not to spiral over plot holes in your manuscript.

This week was a little bit of both.

📖 My Goal: Finish Chapter 25 + Wrap Up Act II

Going into the week, I had one major goal:

✨ Finish Chapter 25 of Project Ember and officially wrap up Act II.

I’ve been deep in rewrites lately, especially as the story continues evolving into something far bigger and more intricate than I originally imagined. What started as a loose Cinderella-inspired revenge story has transformed into something completely different—more adventurous, more emotional, and, in my opinion, much stronger.

And while I’m incredibly proud of that growth, getting there hasn’t exactly been smooth.

🤧 Writing While Sick (Because Deadlines Don’t Care)

I’ve been sick lately. Like really sick.

It started as a sore throat and spiraled into full-on congestion, sinus pressure, ear popping, and exhaustion. There were several days when I genuinely didn’t feel like recording content, getting ready, or even looking at a screen.

But even while sick, I still showed up for my writing.

Not perfectly.
Not always enthusiastically.
But consistently.

My baseline goal has been:
✍️ 2,000 words a day Monday through Friday

And somehow—even through all of the congestion and brain fog—I kept hitting it.

That’s something I’m trying to remind myself more often lately:

You do not need to be perfect to make progress.

☕ Cozy Routines That Keep Me Grounded

One of the things that helps me stay creative is building little pockets of joy into my day.

This week looked like:

  • Setting up my planner
  • Getting ready for a livestream
  • Testing out my new hair dryer
  • Cleaning up my office space
  • Snuggling Scout on rainy mornings
  • Planning celebratory bookstore trips
  • Vision boarding my dream life

There’s something about creating an environment that makes me want to sit down and write.

Not every writing day has to feel like a grind.

Sometimes romanticizing your life a little bit actually helps you keep going.

🌸 My Daily Grind Planner Obsession

Okay. We need to talk about the Daily Grind Spring Reset collection because I was SO excited about this package.

The collection was super limited edition, and I somehow managed to snag one because I buy so much from Daily Grind. (Listen… some people collect handbags. I collect planners and inserts.)

The entire box was centered on resetting routines, setting goals, and creating systems that help you actually follow through on your dreams. That message hit hard this week.

Because writing a novel isn’t really about inspiration.

It’s about systems.
Habits.
Consistency.
Showing up over and over again.

And having tools that help me organize my thoughts genuinely changes everything for me.

✍️ The Hardest Part of Writing Isn’t the Writing

Here’s something I realized this week:

The actual writing?
Easy.

Dialogue? Easy.
Descriptions? Easy.
Action scenes? SO fun.

But plotting? Structuring? Making sure readers feel emotionally carried through the story seamlessly?

That’s the hard part for me.

I’m such a perfectionist when it comes to reader experience.

I want someone to pick up my book, completely disappear into the world, put it down to sleep, and then immediately fall right back into it when they pick it up again.

That kind of immersion matters so much to me.

And this week, I found myself spiraling a little over whether certain twists were landing correctly, whether some chapters needed more depth, and whether the emotional pacing was smooth enough.

But I’m learning that drafting and polishing are two different things.

Drafts are allowed to be imperfect.

💭 Letting Drafts Be Messy

One thing I kept reminding myself this week:

✨ Future me can fix it.

There were moments where I intentionally left placeholder lines or emotional cues because I knew they would trigger deeper rewrites later.

For example:

“The silence was deafening.”

Do I want to keep that exact line? Probably not.

But it reminds me of what the scene needs emotionally when I come back to it for Draft 3.

Sometimes writing is less about getting it perfect immediately and more about leaving breadcrumbs for your future self.

🎉 Finishing Act II

And then finally…

After livestreams, nap-time writing sessions, rewrites, planner spreads, congestion, mindset spirals, and way too many tissues…

✨ I finished Act II of Project Ember. ✨

Or at least… finished enough to move into Act III.

That moment felt huge.

Not because the draft is perfect—it definitely isn’t—but because the story is becoming real in a way it never has before.

📚 Celebrating the Milestone

After finishing Act II, I decided I wanted to celebrate intentionally.

Not with hustle.
Not by immediately forcing myself into the next phase.

But by slowing down.

I started planning out:

  • A potential trip to local bookstores
  • A cozy planning session for May
  • More vision board work
  • Dreaming about future author life moments

Because one thing I’m trying to get better at is celebrating progress before rushing into the next goal.

💌 For Anyone Chasing a Creative Dream…

If you’re in the messy middle of your own creative journey right now, here’s your reminder:

You are allowed to:

  • rest
  • rewrite
  • question yourself
  • start over
  • evolve your story
  • take breaks
  • celebrate small wins

Progress doesn’t always look polished.

Sometimes it looks like writing while congested in sweatpants with popcorn nearby, while hoping your toddler actually naps long enough for another writing sprint.

And honestly?

That still counts. 💖

If you want more behind-the-scenes writing content, cozy routines, and updates on Project Ember, you can always find more over on my newsletter and YouTube channel. ✨

✍️ My Journey to 15K Words: A Week of Writing

There’s something magical about a week where everything clicks. Not because it’s perfect, but because you showed up anyway.

Last week, I wrote 15,000 words and officially finished Act I of Project Ember… and I want to take you behind the scenes of what that really looked like.

Because spoiler: it wasn’t glamorous.

It wasn’t perfectly planned.

But it was consistent.

✨ What It Actually Looks Like to Show Up as a Writer

I love the idea of writing marathons and aesthetic desks, but the truth?

Most of my writing week looked like:

  • Writing in short bursts
  • Squeezing in words between everyday responsibilities
  • Showing up even when I didn’t feel inspired
  • Letting “messy” writing count

As a former corporate climber building my dream author career from scratch, I don’t have endless uninterrupted hours. What I do have is commitment—and that’s what carried me through this week.

📖 Hitting 15K Words + Finishing Act I

This week felt like a turning point.

Not just because of the number (though 15,000 words is a big milestone), but because I:

  • Pushed through resistance
  • Stayed consistent day after day
  • Trusted the process instead of chasing perfection

And by the end of it, I reached something even bigger:

I finished Act I of Project Ember.

There’s something so powerful about crossing that threshold—the moment where your story starts to take real shape.

☕ My Cozy (and Realistic) Writing Routine

This week wasn’t about rigid schedules—it was about rhythm.

My days included:

  • Morning resets (taking care of myself first)
  • Yoga to get out of my head and into my body
  • Cozy writing sessions with a drink nearby
  • Little mindset check-ins to stay grounded

It wasn’t perfect. Some sessions felt amazing, others felt like pulling teeth.

But I kept going.

💭 The Mindset Shift That Changed Everything

The biggest lesson from this week?

👉 Consistency matters more than motivation.

I didn’t wait until I felt inspired.
I didn’t wait until I had the “perfect” idea.

I wrote anyway.

And those small, imperfect sessions added up to something incredible.

🌸 For Anyone on Their Writing Journey…

If you’re in a season where writing feels hard, slow, or uncertain—this is your reminder:

You don’t need perfect conditions.
You don’t need huge bursts of inspiration.

✨ You just need to keep showing up.

Because progress isn’t made in grand, cinematic moments.

It’s made in the quiet, cozy, sometimes messy days where you choose to write anyway.

💌 Let’s Stay Connected

If you want more behind-the-scenes of my writing life, cozy routines, and the journey to becoming a published author, make sure you’re subscribed to my newsletter. 💖

This is just the beginning of Project Ember… and I can’t wait to share what comes next.