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Monday Motivation: Turning Tech Chaos Into Creative Comebacks

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Stop Waiting for Inspiration—Write Anyway

If I wait for inspiration to hit, I will be waiting a long time.

I used to romanticize the idea of “the muse.” I thought I had to be moved—emotionally, spiritually, cosmically—before I sat down to write. Like some lightning bolt had to strike and grant me permission. But over the years, I’ve learned the muse is a no-show more often than not. Life keeps moving, deadlines creep in, and some days my creative well feels like it’s been emptied out and paved over.

So, I stopped waiting.

These days, writing is an act of intentionality, not inspiration. When the ideas aren’t flowing, I make a choice: I either go seek inspiration like I’m on a scavenger hunt through music, old journals, or books I love—or I force myself to write anyway. Even if it’s a mess. Even if it’s painful. Even if it’s just a line that I hate.

Sometimes that means sitting in front of the blank page and going full drill sergeant on myself:
“You said you want to be a writer—then write.”
“This isn’t about perfection, it’s about showing up.”
“You don’t need to be in the mood to get this done.”
“This isn’t punishment. It’s practice.”

It’s not always graceful. It’s not always poetic. Sometimes it feels like dragging myself through the mud. But what’s wild is that most days, about 20 minutes in, the muse decides to show up late like it’s fashionably acceptable.

The truth is: creative work doesn’t always feel good while it’s happening. It feels like work. But that’s how you build the muscle. That’s how you train your brain to show up even when it doesn’t feel magical.

And I don’t say this from a place of having it all together. I’ve had seasons where I didn’t write for weeks because I was waiting to “feel like it.” I’ve also had seasons where I wrote every day in ten-minute chunks because it was the only thing keeping me sane. The difference wasn’t inspiration—it was mindset.

You can be your own muse. You can write even when you don’t want to. You can finish the thing without needing the stars to align.

I write because I have something to say. I write because it helps me understand the world—and myself. I write because I don’t want to wake up one day full of unfinished stories and “what ifs.”

So if you’ve been stuck waiting for the right time, the right mood, the right conditions—stop.

Start writing in the middle of the chaos. The magic shows up when you do.

What’s been stopping you from writing lately? Is it the mood? The fear? The distractions? Let’s talk about it in the comments.

#authorReflections #creativeMotivation #LatinaWriters #writingRoutine

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