There was a time when every step in the kitchen felt like it needed to be perfect. Spoiler: it didn’t.
The Overthinking Phase
I overthought everything. Measurements, timing, whether I was even doing it right. Second-guessing my own recipes mid-bake. I wanted everything to be perfect before I even started. I even second-guessed starting The Sweet Life. Yeah, you can say overthinking really got to me.
And here’s what I’ve learned since: overthinking comes from a place of not trusting yourself. It wasn’t that I didn’t know what I was doing. It was that I didn’t fully trust the baker in me yet.
Why I Was Overthinking
Being a beginner baker in a world full of more experienced bakers will do that to you. I worried about misleading people with the recipes I was sharing. I compared myself to other creators who seemed to have it all figured out. I wanted validation — especially knowing that in a Caribbean home, the feedback comes fast and it comes honest.
All of that noise made it hard to simply show up and trust myself.
The Shift
The change didn’t come all at once. It came slowly, through repetition. The repetition of failing, learning, adjusting, and trying again — even when I felt like quitting. The repetition of bakes that came out beautifully, giving me proof that I could actually do this. The more time I spent in the kitchen, the more I learned to trust my instincts. And the more I learned that mistakes weren’t the end. They were just points showing me where I needed to grow.
The Things I Used to Overthink
If it doesn’t look perfect, it’s a fail
I didn’t fully realize how much I was holding myself to this standard until my coconut turnovers showed me otherwise. The bake didn’t come out flawlessly — not the way I’d pictured it in my head. But the flavor? Spot on. Honestly better than getting it from my favorite bakery.
That bake changed something in me. It taught me that a bake doesn’t have to look perfect to be good — or even great. That the real questions are: is the process right? Is the flavor there? Did I get the texture I was going for? Appearance is one part of the story, not the whole thing.
→ Coconut turnover recipe linked here.
Following the recipe exactly
I’ll be honest, I was never really an “overthink the recipe” person. I was more of a “how can I tweak this first?” person. You know how you start building something without reading the instructions because you think you’ve got it, then halfway through realize you’ve done it completely wrong and have to start over? That was me.
What I learned is that you have to build the foundation first. Follow the recipe, understand it, get a feel for it — and then you play. More nutmeg, less sugar, swap the essence. The creativity comes after the foundation. Not instead of it.
What people will think
This was the big one. The fear of someone trying a recipe, having it fail, and blaming me for the blunder. It almost stopped me from starting The Sweet Life entirely.
Growing up as the oldest in a Caribbean household comes with its own particular kind of pressure. You’re expected to have things figured out. And if you don’t, the feedback finds you quickly. Add in a sprinkle of having your biggest insecurity pointed out and in walks fear of judgment, ready to set up camp.
It even followed me into content. Did I get the right angle? Does my voice sound too high? Is what I’m sharing good enough? Every video felt like it needed to be perfect before it could go out into the world.
What helped was showing up anyway. Consistently refining how I teach, analyzing mistakes instead of just feeling bad about them, and learning to trust that if something is off in a recipe, I’ll catch it or my followers will tell me and we’ll fix it together. Understanding that every kitchen is different helped too. Some conditions will vary and that’s completely okay.
Whether I was a real baker or just someone who baked
This one quietly lived in the background for a long time. Because yes, I love baking. I love connecting with a bake through touch and pouring care into it. But did that make me a real baker? I wasn’t doing this on a commercial level. Was I allowed to claim that title?
What I’ve come to understand is that I am a baker. Because I create recipes, build systems, study my craft, and keep improving. I also had to stop shrinking the space I take up. I used to say “welcome to my sweet little corner of the internet” — but The Sweet Life isn’t little anymore. We’re taking up more space. And that’s exactly as it should be.
What Overthinking Was Really Doing
I wasn’t just overthinking the bake. I was overthinking myself.
And honestly? It was stealing the joy I found in baking. It took away from my creativity, left me frustrated, and held me back for longer than I’d like to admit. Because you can’t create freely from a place of questioning everything you do. It makes everything heavier than it needs to be. It stops you from just being present and enjoying the moments.
What Changed
I’m not going to pretend the overthinking stopped overnight. It didn’t. It took small steps, every single time I showed up in the kitchen. Learning to trust what I was seeing and what I was feeling. Letting go of the need for things to be perfect — or even to come together the way I planned. Because in the middle of a pivot, that’s when I’ve learned the most about the baker and the person I’m becoming.
The Tradition I Come From
In Caribbean kitchens, baking was never really about precision. It was about feel. A pinch of this, a handful of that, adjusting by instinct rather than instruction. Nobody was second-guessing themselves over a measuring cup. The confidence came from repetition — from showing up so many times that the hands just knew.
That’s the tradition I’m rooted in. And the more time I spend in my own kitchen, the more I understand that the overthinking was never really about baking. It was about learning to trust myself the way that tradition always intended.
Give Yourself Room to Grow
When you first start out, there will be questions. There will be doubts. But you don’t need to have everything figured out to be a good baker. You just need the willingness to be consistent.
Keep showing up. When a bake fails. When something doesn’t look the way you pictured it. When everyone is watching. Keep going long enough to give yourself undeniable proof that you can do this — so that when the doubts creep back in, you have something to point to. You have receipts.
Trust your instincts. Trust your skills. And give yourself room to grow into the baker you already are.
What’s something you overthink in the kitchen? Drop it in the comments, I’d love to hear.




