Small steps, soft plans, and finding my way back to what matters
Lately, I’ve been sitting with a big question: How do I get my joy of sewing back?
Not the productivity.
Not the perfectly planned projects.
Not the pressure to finish what I said I would.
The joy.
This year, my word is Intentional. I’m realizing that getting my joy back doesn’t require a dramatic reset. It requires intentionality. Small, thoughtful choices made with care instead of urgency.
Intentional Baby Steps (Instead of Big Resolutions)
Right now, my next steps aren’t bold or flashy. They’re intentional.
They look like:
- Sitting at my sewing space without the obligation to produce
- Touching fabric without deciding its destiny
- Sewing for 15 minutes and stopping when it feels right
- Choosing curiosity over guilt
Being intentional means honoring where I am today, not where I think I should be. Joy returns when sewing feels safe again—when it’s allowed to be slow, imperfect, and just for me.
The Finish It and Toss It Series—An Intentional Revisit
I’ve been asking myself a big question. Should I continue the Finish It and Toss It series? This involves the planned work through my unfinished sewing projects, also known as WIPs and UFOs.
Here’s what intentionality is teaching me: The idea still has value. But, the way I engage with it needs to change.
Instead of finishing everything out of obligation, I’m choosing to intentionally revisit each project.
Some will be finished with care.
Some will be altered with fresh eyes.
Some will be released—intentionally and without guilt.
Completion is no longer the goal. Alignment is.
Do I Scrap All My Plans or Start Fresh?
An intentional approach doesn’t mean throwing everything away.
Those plans were created thoughtfully, but by a version of me with different energy and expectations. Rather than scrapping them entirely, I’m choosing to review them intentionally:
- Keeping what still feels supportive
- Adjusting what feels restrictive
- Letting go of what no longer serves me
Starting fresh doesn’t always mean starting from zero. Sometimes it means editing with intention.
What Do I Tell the People Following Along?
Intentional communication matters too.
What I want to share—clearly and honestly—is this:
- I’m reconnecting with sewing for joy, not constant output
- Plans shift as I move more intentionally
- Unfinished does not mean unsuccessful
- This season is about sustainability, not speed
I don’t owe perfection. What I do owe is honesty—both to myself and to the people who have chosen to follow along.
Moving Ahead—Intentionally
This next chapter isn’t about doing more.
It’s about doing what matters.
I’m choosing to move ahead intentionally—allowing space for rest, creativity, and change. Whether joy returns quickly or slowly, I’m committed to listening, adjusting, and honoring the process.
This isn’t the end of sewing for me.
It’s an intentional, gentler beginning.
Please read the earlier post When You Lose the Will to Do What You Love here

