LOA Blog Series Part 8: Creating a Daily Law of Attraction Writing Routine

Just joining the series? You can start with post one, here.

Morning visualization, affirmations, gratitude; writing intention; evening reflection. Consistency builds momentum, but consistency doesn’t have to be grueling. No routine, no matter how well designed, is going to work for you if you don’t do it. It’s important that you tailor any routines to you and your life so they can work for you.

Try This:
Design a 10-minute LOA routine
2 min gratitude – example: I’m grateful for the great ideas I get for my stories.
3 min visualization – example: Visualize your perfect writing day. Where, when, and how with details.
5 min affirmations – example: I write good stories worth publishing. Readers love reading my stories.

Remember, these items don’t have to be fancy. The important thing is that they make you feel something that reinforces your resolve and supports your process. They should resonate with you and when they stop resonating, it’s time to lean in and find out why and where your current course is taking you.

Daily LOA primes writing for success. When you practice the steps you can’t fail. Even failure itself is a victory because you’ve learned about what you don’t want. Share your 10-minute LOA routine in the comments. I’d love to hear about it and you could help others who feel stuck.

LOA Blog Series Part 7: Abundance Mindset for a Sustainable Writing Career

Just joining the series? You can start with post one, here.

Scarcity thinking stunts creativity. Celebrate other writers, see competition as collaboration, trust your voice. Scarcity thinking is fear. It’s also a common advertising tool, triggering scarcity thinking of FOMO (fear of missing out) by using phrases like “limited availability”, “only a limited number of (insert item here) available”. Sometimes it’s actually true. Remember the Law of Attraction, what you think about is what shows up in your world. If you’re thinking about what you’re lacking, what other people have that you don’t, you’ll attract more of that scarcity.

Try This instead:
Note one thing you admire in another writer daily.

An abundance mindset sustains joy and attracts opportunities. Focus on what’s going right. Follow that, and watch abundance flow to you. I’d love to hear how this step works for you. Post your experience below. You might help others, too.

Monday Musings: LOA Part 6 Manifesting Publishing Opportunities

If you just joining the series, you can start from post one here.

Here’s where the rubber starts meeting the road, so to speak. Where you begin to put together the tools you’ve learned so far to manifest your writerly dreams. As such, I’m going to go into a little more detail than you’ve seen so far. Right-O, let’s start with some exercises. Pick one to work on that makes sense for where you are in with your writing project.

Try This:

1. The Visualization & Embodiment Exercise: “My Launch Day”
Purpose: Align emotionally and energetically with the experience of being a published author.

How to do it:
Sit somewhere quiet, close your eyes, and take a few deep breaths.
Imagine your launch day as vividly as possible:
You’re holding your book in your hands.
You see readers’ posts online celebrating your release.
You smell the fresh pages and feel the excitement in your body.

Anchor that feeling — joy, pride, gratitude — and repeat silently:
“This is my reality now. My words are out in the world.”

Write down a few sensory details afterward (“The book felt warm in my hands,” “The bookstore lights were bright and inviting”).

Why it works: Your subconscious mind starts aligning your thoughts, emotions, and behaviors with that version of yourself.

2. Scripting Exercise: “My Book is Out There”
Purpose: Use journaling as an energetic pre-order for your publishing success.

How to do it:
Write a journal entry as if your publishing dream has already happened.

Example prompts:
“I can’t believe I’m holding my finished book — it looks even better than I imagined.”
“My publisher emailed to say early reviews are glowing!”
“Readers are connecting deeply with my story.”

Add emotion and gratitude throughout — write from the feeling of it being real, not just about it.

Why it works: Writing from the end state sends a clear, emotional signal to the universe of what you’re calling in — and keeps your belief steady.

3. Alignment in Action: “Inspired Submissions”
Purpose: Pair belief with tangible, aligned action.

How to do it:
Before submitting a query, self-publishing your book, or sharing a sample, center yourself with this intention:
“The right opportunities are drawn to my words with ease.”

Visualize your query letter or upload glowing with golden light — imagine it landing exactly where it belongs. Take the action with confidence and release the outcome.

Afterward, write a gratitude statement like:
“I’m grateful for every opportunity that moves me closer to publication.”

Why it works: LOA amplifies results when belief meets motion. You’re signaling to the universe that you’re ready and aligned — not waiting.

LOA transforms publishing into inevitable when paired with action. Take one publishing action today with visualization. Use and/or change it up as you move forward. Share in the comments for others who might be stumped. I’d love to hear how this works out for you.

Monday Musings Part 5: Attracting Inspiration Instead of Chasing It

Just finding the series? Start with post #1: Monday Musings: LOA for Writers

Sorry to be late this week, guys. Let’s get into it.
The law of Attraction teaches that what you’re open to, you receive. Trying to force ideas often backfires. Instead, create an environment where inspiration flows naturally. Quiet meditation, walks in nature, or freewriting exercises clear blocks.

Examples:

  • Keep an “idea notebook” for sparks that come unexpectedly.
  • Use freewriting to release pressure and allow ideas to surface.

Exercise:
Take a 10-minute walk outside and jot down the first 5 ideas that pop into your head. Don’t judge them — just receive.

Takeaway:
When you shift from chasing to receiving, ideas come effortlessly.