Yes/No. Writing doesn't have an "it." As cliched and trite as this may sound, writing comes from the heart and writing to please others (which is what the term "it" insinuates you plan to do) is not enjoyable at all unless you are the one who plans to enjoy writing. And the "I don't want to sit down and type/write/sketch" thing is normal. That doesn't count as unhappiness.
But criticism wise, I don't have much to say. Work on grammar and try to flesh out the material side as well. I don't really know what the ship thingy looks like from the story. Details!
I.E.
She was sitting at the front of a large spindle. A large, doomed spindle. The normally beautiful emission from the fusion drive puttered out the back. The normally beautiful ship, her beautiful ship, was dying! Half of the ship was aflame, the other totally non-responsive. Lit only by the reddened LEDs and the displays of various stations, the bridge was a sweaty, cramped harbor in the storm. A hot spark on her arm brought her back to the current situation: a gigantic negative space wedgie, a rocking bridge bucking like the wild horse of one of her ancient ancestors and spewing sparks where molycircs had been fried, and no hope of the ship's survival. She ran to the escape pods, situated at the opposite of the hemispherical bridge and then...