You do have the advantage of being young, single (I think), and childless. Once a person is married, there's someone else's needs and wants to take into consideration, and once a baby shows up, its needs come first for quite some time. Speaking from the perspective of someone who is now a grandmother, raising my children did not allow for much "me time", or hobbies, but being a mother is what I wanted to do. So, in a way, it was still "me time." It's easy to lose track of oneself in the child-raising years, or perhaps I should say it's easy to lose track of the person one thought one was before children arrived. But we change, and we adapt, and we grow.
As a society, I think we are to obsessed with "self-care", to the point where the busy young mother feels not only frustrated but also guilty when she doesn't have a chance to go off by herself for a day. Being a parent forces us to learn more about giving, sacrificing, and putting others' needs before our own. So go for it, girl! Do your writing, your learning, your traveling, and your yoga! Enjoy it all! Some day you might not have as much time for all of that, if you choose motherhood. But if motherhood is your choice some day, you can enjoy that choice as well. Most of the time. (Let's be realistic here.)
Wow, I really rambled on there, didn't I? Well, it's late and I should be in bed.
RE: Things I've Made a Priority