I can relate because I recently went through something similar after being at a crossroads for months. I'm a partner in a small law firm and just opened my own business last week, so my plan is just now starting to come to fruition.
Putting a plan down on paper is a great start. Not only identifying deficiencies in your life, but coming up with a logical solution. It's easy to say "damn, I need to stack some paper", but sitting down and actually putting yourself on a budget and exploring additional avenues in which you can create a revenue stream for yourself is a whole different thing all together.
Obviously realizing you need to get your shyt together is the FIRST step, but actually taking that first step and putting whatever plan you may have came up with into action is by FAR the hardest.
You'll usually get some type of bullshyt from your boys about how you're "not on the scene" anymore or you been ghost; dudes on Twitter crackin jokes about how you're too good now to tweet about $200 dates and shyt; but fukk all that, the bars, nightclubs, bytches, and bottles will still be there when you get your life in order and bread lookin proper.
Another tough part is actually being realistic about the goals that you set out for yourself... there's a fine line between selling yourself short and expecting too much too soon; so you gotta find that middle ground to where your ultimate goal is actually worthy of achievement, and at the same time, not so outlandish that you might become discouraged because you didn't reach some lofty expectations that were essentially unattainable in the first place.
The good thing is though, once you put your plan in motion, shyt seems to almost go along on its own (assuming you stay disciplined). You signed up for a gym and started going every morning. Now you're starting to see some results, so it encourages you to eat better, ultimately doing wonders for your health, as well as your wallet because you're not eating out as much. Because you're taking care of yourself, your physique looks better and you got more confidence, so the hoes come flockin. So things end up compounding.
I can't speak for anyone else, but the key for me is staying on a strict schedule. Going to the gym at the same time every morning, eating meals at the same time every day if you can, etc. It lets you better manage your time and not get distracted on some "damn, I feel like I just sat down to watch Unsolved Mysteries, how the fukk did 4 hours go by just now?!" shyt.
Honestly, it sounds corny as fukk, but surrounding yourself with positive, driven people is so key. Most people got a crabs in a bucket mentality, as it's easier to TALK about what you or someone else can't do while smoking an L on the couch than actually putting a plan together and making moves to achieve it. Your blog is poppin so I'm sure you come in contact with people who are successful in the same arena, so I'd do all that I could to pick their brains and try to create a lane for yourself. But being around people who have already gone through whatever obstacles you're eventually gonna stumble upon, and made it through all that to become successful is inspiring and serves as the carrot on the stick when you start to feel doubt and think you might be in over your head.
Hope this helps.