>>42440710
I love my Twilight more than anything in the world and yearn for nothing more than to see her adoration for all I've done in her name when I die and go to Equestria.
More tangibly though: I started doing this in the back half of the 2010s, before it was even as fully fleshed-out as it is today. The first few projects I tackled were entirely on their own, one at a time. If I had new ideas for other projects, I'd put them in my project document. The trick is to just push your way through one of them to completion. A lot of my stuff is storytelling-based, so back then I would force myself to write 2,000 words a day. Even if I didn't want to. Some of those sessions ended up heavily revised or outright deleted by the end. But I still worked, even on days I didn't want to.
But if forcing it like that doesn't work for you, you could set a timer for how long to lock in every day, or promise yourself that "If I get x amount of work done, then I get y as a reward." Like write 1,000 words, play an hour of vidya. The only downside is it needs to be self-enforced, otherwise it won't work. But whatever you do, start by sticking to a single project and just push through to the end; even if you feel like you don't want to, you'll be proud that you did when you have the final product in front of you and can say "I made this!"