By Author Kathryn Mykel
Quilter|
Quilt-Fiction Author| Quilt Pattern Designer
For years I had a private reward waiting in the back of my mind. When I finally “made it” as an author, I would celebrate with a fancy cruise.
I didn’t reach that goal in one dramatic
breakthrough. I got there gradually by setting small targets and giving myself
reasons to continue on each day. And, in a plot twist that may surprise readers
who know me primarily for my cozy mystery novels, it was quilting that
ultimately made that goal a reality and paid for the trip.
In my last guest post here, I talked about how story
ideas often begin in ordinary places. During sewing days with friends, through
casual conversations, and how the rhythm of creative work have shaped the
mysteries I write. This post looks at the other side of that process.
Inspiration and creativity may have started my journey, but structure and
motivation have kept it moving.
Over the past five years, I’ve written more than
fifty stories. On paper, that sounds impressive. In practice, it looks like
structure and a very strict schedule. Deadlines must be met, the marketing
never stops, and new ideas compete with ongoing projects. Most days my desk is
a hot mess, much like my sewing table. Projects pile up in various stages of
completion, all demanding my attention. It’s really controlled chaos at its
finest.
About two years in, I made what I now think of as my
“burning the boats” decision. I stepped away from the quilting business work
I’d been balancing alongside writing and went all in on being a full-time
author. As you can imagine, that decision felt both practical and terrifying.
There was no comfortable fallback plan and no alternate source of income. If I
wanted this career to work, I had to treat it like a real one.
It didn’t take long to realize that motivation was
unreliable. Some days the words came easily. Many days they didn’t.
What helped me was learning to celebrate even the
smallest victories. In the beginning, the goal was simple. Sell one book in a
day. Later it became hitting a certain number of page reads, reaching a ranking
milestone, or winning an award. Each step forward became a reason to
acknowledge progress, reward myself, and keep going.
Sometimes the rewards were small. Finishing a draft
might mean a trip to the quilt shop, or taking an afternoon off without (too
much) guilt. Maintaining my best-seller banner could justify a favorite meal or
a quiet evening with a good audio book (someone else’s). A successful book
launch might call for a weekend of quilting with friends. These incremental
incentives helped turn both the daily grind and long stretches of work into a
series of goals, celebrations, and rewards.
Stepping back from writing this year to focus more
heavily on quilting reinforced the same lesson. Creative work often moves in
cycles. As I spent more time designing patterns and sewing samples for
magazines, that income began to accumulate. Without intending it as a writing
reward, the quilting ultimately funded an opportunity that came my way
unexpectedly.
Here’s that plot twist I mentioned earlier. Next
month I’ll be boarding an Alaskan author-reader cruise, something I used to
joke was my “when I make it as an author” reward. Now, the cruise feels less
like a prize and more like a consequence of committing fully to the path I’d
chosen. Ironically, it also serves as a reminder that creative work has a way
of coming full circle in unexpected ways.
Tell us, have you ever turned productivity into a personal game? Do you set goals and reward yourself for achieving them? And what’s the biggest reward you’re working toward right now?
Kathryn Mykel is a bestselling author of quilting-themed cozy mysteries and a professional quilt pattern designer whose work has appeared in national quilting publications. She lives in New England with her pup, Bentley.
Find Kathryn’s work here www.authorkathrynmykel.com
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