Katherine Sciver-Brunt has admitted the positive changes England have undergone since Jon Lewis' arrival mean she is now unsure as to when she will call time on her international career.
Having officially retired from Tests and quietly slipped away from ODIs last year, Sciver-Brunt had planned to end her England career after this month's T20 World Cup.
The 37-year-old still might do should England go all the way in South Africa but, if not, she intends to stay on top of her fitness for T20 franchise opportunities as there is the pull of this summer's Ashes.
Adding to her uncertainty is how reinvigorated she has felt under a fresher, more attacking approach ushered in by Lewis, appointed England head coach last November.
"If I stop now I'd be happy but lots of things happen in short spaces of time sometimes and Jon Lewis coming in has just reignited some stuff and the environment's amazing," she said.
"I can see the future these girls have got and I'm jealous, I'm not going to lie, the things that are happening are extremely positive. Where I was clear five months ago, I'm now unclear.
"If we won the World Cup that could be a really good time to stop and five months ago I had promised everyone that's what I would do. But if we don't win then the Ashes are two seconds away.
"I would still be bowling and still be fit. It's not something I can say 'no' to just yet. I can pretty much say the international side of things is probably this year."
Sciver-Brunt is set to make her 263rd international appearance when England begin their T20 World Cup campaign against West Indies at Paarl on Saturday.
England clean swept an understrength Windies in three ODIs and five T20s in December, marking the start of a sea change in their perspective as they looked to get on the front foot against their opponents.
"It's certainly the one that if it goes right, if it's your day, we'll beat anyone," Sciver-Brunt said.
"If it goes wrong then it can go really wrong. It's exciting but it's also quite scary as well. No one wants to get thrashed but as long as you live and die by the sword you can live and accept losing.
"It's the being able to fail that is the bit that makes you better because if you're so worried about losing your wicket you will get 50-ball fifties but you won't get 30-ball fifties and that's the difference between moving forward and standing still. We are 100 per cent committed to it."
Sciver-Brunt, who was integral in England's 50-over World Cup wins in 2009 and 2017, bowed out of Test cricket last year while she recently announced she will stop playing regional and county cricket.
Accepting she will not be around for the next 50-over World Cup, scheduled to take place in India in 2025, Sciver-Brunt does not want to stand in the way of someone else staking a claim for England.
While she has not officially retired from ODIs, Sciver-Brunt, who hopes to play in the inaugural Women's Premier League this year and has entered next week's auction at the top base price, is ostensibly a T20 specialist.
"I want it to be about 'I'm still here, I'm still performing at my best' and when I finish, I finish, and I finish everything," she added.
"I didn't want to have to retire from something again before I stopped playing because the emphasis becomes on retiring altogether.
"I am a T20 player and that's given me more longevity to my career and opened up other avenues. I'm just trying to live every day as it comes and enjoy what time I have left as a cricketer."
Watch the 2023 ICC Women's T20 World Cup live on Sky Sports throughout February.
South Africa vs Sri Lanka begins the tournament from 5pm on Friday (4.30pm on air) with England starting on Saturday against West Indies (12.30pm on air, 1pm first ball).