đȘâš The Hyperfixation Chronicles: A Crow-Brained Guide to Cozy Constants, Crafty Chaos, and Creative Eras
Welcome to Hyperfixation Station, Population: Me
Some people have hobbies.
I have eras.
I donât âtry a new craft.â
I fall headfirst into a full-blown creative identity shift that lasts anywhere from three days to three months.
But not all hyperfixations behave the same way.
Some are seasonal.
Some are rotational.
Some burn bright and vanish like glitter comets.
And some â the rare, precious few â become constants.
For me, that looks like this:
My Forever Fixations
- Cooking
- Baking
- Reading
My Newer-but-Stable Constant
Soaps, wax melts, candles, and bath/body products
My Rotating Craft Eras
- Sublimation
- Beaded pens, keychains, bookmarks
- Resin
- Squishies
- Vinyl stickers
- 3D paper cut art
- Wreaths
- Vinyl signs
- Digital planners
- And whatever shiny thing grabs me next
This is the story of all of them â the anchors, the evolutions, and the delightful chaos in between.
đł Chapter 1: The Forever Fixations â Cooking, Baking & Reading
Cooking: My Lifelong Companion
Cooking isnât a phase â itâs a relationship.
It evolves with me, especially as my dietary needs shift.
These days, Iâm on a mission to:
- Recreate comfort foods in healthier ways
- Adapt recipes to support my body
- Make meals that feel good and taste good
- Keep things low-spoon, high-satisfaction
Some days Iâm experimenting like a mad scientist.
Other days Iâm throwing veggies in a pan and calling it a win.
But I always come back to cooking â itâs grounding, creative, and deeply personal.
Baking: My Cozy Ritual
Baking is my therapy, my chaos, and my love language to myself.
Iâve baked through:
- Stress
- Joy
- Hormonal storms
- Executive dysfunction
- Holidays
- Random Tuesdays
And as my bodyâs needs have changed, so has my baking:
- Lower sugar
- Higher protein
- More fiber
- Less crash
- Same comfort
Itâs science, itâs magic, and itâs one of my oldest forms of self-care.
Reading: My Longest, Steadiest Love
Reading is the one hyperfixation that never burns out.
I wander.
I get distracted.
I fall into craft rabbit holes.
But I always return to books like theyâre old friends waiting with warm blankets and questionable life choices.
Reading gives me:
- Escape
- Inspiration
- Emotional regulation
- New worlds to hyperfixate on
- Characters to adopt as emotional support creatures
Itâs not a phase. Itâs a lifestyle.
đ§ŒChapter 2: The Newer Constant â Soaps, Wax Melts & Body Products
This one started as a hyperfixationâŠ
and then it stayed.
This is my apothecary era, but make it permanent.
I create:
- Soaps
- Wax melts
- Candles
- Bath salts
- Sugar scrubs
- Bath bombs
And unlike some of my craft eras, this one didnât fade.
It grew.
It deepened.
It became a soothing, sensory, grounding ritual that supports my body and my brain.
I learned:
- Soap batter moves faster than my executive function
- Wax has moods
- Fragrance oils lie
- Mica powder travels through walls
- And I genuinely love the process
This isnât just a craft anymore â itâs part of my identity.
đšChapter 3: The Rotating Craft Eras (A.K.A. The Glitter Comets)
These eras come and go, each one burning bright and fast.
And honestly? I adore every single one.
The Sublimation Era
I sublimated:
- Tumblers
- Pillows
- Mouse pads
- Keychains
- Makeup bags
- Booâboo bags
- Coffee mugs
- Coasters
- Tote bags
- Tâshirts
If it held still long enough, it got sublimated.
My home smelled like polyester and ambition.
The Beaded Pen, Keychain & Bookmark Era (A.K.A. âI Became a Bead Goblin and Iâm Not Sorryâ)
It started with one cute beaded pen.
Then suddenly I owned:
- Beads in every color and finish
- Pen barrels
- Jump rings, lobster clasps, head pins
- A bead organizer that made me feel like a whimsical hardware store owner
Then came beaded keychains.
Then beaded bookmarks â elegant, dangly, sparkly, and sometimes heavier than the book.
At one point, if I dropped a bead container, it sounded like a fairy avalanche.
The Resin Era
This era was equal parts magic and chaos.
I made:
- Keychains
- Trinket trays
- Glittery shapes
- Letter sets
- Random objects that served no purpose but were pretty
I learned:
- Resin has moods
- Bubbles are the enemy
- Gloves are non-negotiable
- And glitter becomes a permanent part of your home
It was messy, shiny, and deeply satisfying.
The Squishy Era
This one was pure serotonin.
I painted and decorated:
- Squishy animals
- Squishy desserts
- Squishy foods
- Squishy things that defied classification
It was soft, soothing, and the closest Iâve ever come to crafting therapy.
The Vinyl Sticker Era
This was the era where I became a sticker factory.
I designed and cut:
- Car stickers
- Snarky stickers
- Cute stickers
- Mirror stickers
- Stickers that existed simply because they made me laugh
Every surface became a potential sticker target.
The 3D Paper Cut Picture Era
Precision. Layers. Shadow boxes.
My cutting machine judged me, but the results were magical.
The Wreath-Making Era
Every door in my life had a wreath.
My neighborâs door had a wreath.
My momâs door had a wreath.
My cat almost had a wreath.
The Vinyl Sign Era
I became a oneâwoman sign shop.
If it was a flat surface, I put vinyl on it.
The Digital Planner Era
Aesthetic perfection.
Organizational delusion.
Systems I absolutely did not follow.
But the dopamine? Immaculate.
đ§ Why My Hyperfixations Work Like This
Crafting eras come and go because theyâre:
- Novel
- Sensory
- Creative
- Rewarding
- Tangible
- Dopamine-rich
Cooking, baking, reading, and now bath/body crafting stay because theyâre:
- Comforting
- Regulating
- Familiar
- Nourishing
- Flexible
- Part of my identity
Both matter.
Both are valid.
Both are magic.
đ The Magic of Letting Yourself Have Eras
Hyperfixations arenât flaky.
Theyâre not failures.
Theyâre not âwasted moneyâ or âunfinished projects.â
Theyâre chapters in your creative life.
Some chapters end.
Some chapters repeat.
Some chapters â like cooking, baking, reading, and now soap/wax crafting â become the spine of the whole book.
đȘ¶ Final Thoughts from the Crow-Brained Conductor of Hyperfixation Station
If youâre here, youâre probably a fellow collector of hobbies, projects, and halfâfinished masterpieces. Welcome â truly. Youâre safe here.
Your hyperfixations arenât chaos; theyâre breadcrumbs leading you back to yourself. Every era, every spark, every sudden obsession is a clue about what lights you up and how your beautifully nonlinear brain moves through the world.
And honestly? I canât wait to see what my next era will be.
To help you explore your own creative cycles, I made a free worksheet you can print, scribble on, or tuck into your planner. Itâs a gentle way to track your longâterm interests, your stable favorites, and the rotating hyperfixations that make life feel magical.
Download your worksheet below and start mapping your eras.
‘Til next time, may your next hyperfixation be affordable, accessible, and only mildly unhinged.

About the Author: Kat Ravenmere, patron saint of Abandoned Craft Supplies and Sudden Obsessions, writes for the beautifully scattered, the wildly curious, and anyone whoâs ever had twelve hobbies and an executive function that acts like a confused side character from an entirely different book.
