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Owned by Cyndi

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3 contributions to Lorna K. Bailey
Can we talk about something for a second?
You’ve probably heard it a hundred times on the self-publishing podcasts: “There’s never been a better time to be an indie author.” And honestly? I agree with that. The platforms, the tools, the ability to publish your book, price it yourself, and keep 70% of royalties without a single gatekeeper involved. It really is remarkable when you stop to think about it. But here’s the part nobody says out loud: There has also never been a more overwhelming time to be an indie author. Wide or exclusive. Ads or organic. Rapid release or slow and steady. Vellum or Scrivener or Atticus or whatever dropped last week that someone in a Facebook group is swearing by, directly contradicting what someone else swore by last Tuesday. New software every other week. Another platform asking for your content. Another strategy. Another tool promising to fix everything. It’s… a lot. 😵‍💫 And I know so many authors are walking around quietly convinced they’re lazy, or unfocused, or just not cut out for this. When actually? They’re drowning in options. That is not a character flaw. It is a completely rational response to an overwhelming amount of input. The authors I’ve seen build something real and sustainable didn’t do it by finding the perfect tool or the perfect strategy. They did it by getting ruthless about their focus. Not hustle-culture ruthless. Not grind-until-you-break ruthless. Quiet, intentional, almost boring ruthless. The kind where you close the tab. You don’t download the new app. You decide what your business actually needs right now and you protect that decision. Your focus is the most valuable asset you have right now. Not your backlist (yet). Not your email list (yet). Not your covers or your blurb or your metadata. Your ability to sit down and do what actually moves the needle. So if you’ve been feeling scattered lately, I want you to hear this: You’re not lazy. You’re not failing. You’re just operating in an environment that was not designed to help you succeed.
1 like • 27d
@Lorna Bailey Love that ❤️ “I don't have to have the book *completely* figured out to start writing it!”
Almost to the weekend. Finish the week strong. . .
Daily check-in: Writing goal: Word count or are you needing to edit some words - what does today look like? Marketing: One action. Just one. Doesn't have to be big. Share below. Let's hold each other to it.
1 like • 27d
My writing and marketing goals were combined today. I needed to finish a written interview for a local magazine/website. It entailed writing and editing about 1,500 words.
What's the best review you've ever gotten for one of your books?
Not best as in most stars. Best as in the one that stopped you mid-scroll. The one you screenshot and keep somewhere and remember when you're feeling down. The one a reader left that made you think -- okay, this is why I do this! Maybe it was three sentences that nailed exactly what you were trying to do. Maybe it was a reader who said your book helped them through something hard. Maybe it was someone who stayed up until 2am because they couldn't put it down and felt compelled to tell you about it. Drop it in the comments. Copy and paste the whole thing if you want. We want to read it! Because sometimes in the middle of the hard work -- the edits, the launches, the slow months, the self-doubt -- we need to remember that our books are landing. That real people are reading our words and feeling something because of them. That matters more than the algorithm ever will.
What's the best review you've ever gotten for one of your books?
1 like • May 13
It was just a reply from a friend when I shared a short story with her that I wrote.“Cyndi! You have such an amazing way with words. That was awesome!!”
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Cyndi Wilson
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2points to level up
@cyndi-wilson-3259
🌿 Helping people feel better before they’re better by asking different questions about chronic inflammation

Active 9h ago
Joined Apr 28, 2026
INFJ
Texas