They always wondered, what does she do all day, locked in that apartment? And then someone told them: she listens to silence. Not the silence of emptiness, but the kind that has layers. She reads of civilizations buried under oceans. She argues with dead philosophers and with gods who had changed names too many times. She measures storms before they arrived, watches the sun misbehave, and waits for the Earth to confess what it had done to mammoths and mountains. She writes about things no one had asked her to write and answers to questions no one around her thought to ask. She listens to Sanskrit pronounced by voices older than empires. She studies pain like a physician and mystery like a priest. She tries to understand why people destroy beauty and why some spend their whole lives trying to protect one tree, one child, one truth. She's never bored. She is busy surviving the noise of the world by choosing a better sound. For them silence meant absence but for her, silence is where everything important still lived.
Enter Logs

Truth Log

Truth Log is a long record of thought, reflections, questions, and fragments gathered over time.

Here you will find philosophical and psychological essays, reflections on illness and mortality, observations on society, power, religion, history, and the strange mechanics of human behavior. There are glimpses of my past, fragments of my novels, private recognitions, and arguments with the world as it presents itself.

Truth Log is written to preserve thought before it is softened, forgotten, or made polite. It is a record of looking directly—at the world, at others, and sometimes at oneself.

Enter Chronicles

Chronicles

Chronicles is a collection of stories where imagination is allowed to wander without apology. Here live strange travelers, impossible worlds, old symbols, and characters who arrive carrying questions larger than themselves.

Some tales lean toward myth, others toward science fiction, satire, or philosophical reflection. Many carry a touch of irony, a quiet criticism of human habits, ambitions, and absurdities.

Chronicles is not meant to explain the world, but to look at it sideways—through fantasy, humor, and speculation—where truth sometimes reveals itself more clearly than in facts alone.

Enter Sanctuary

Sanctuary

Sanctuary is the living world around me: the birds I feed and observe, the plants I nurture and protect, and the changing environment that shapes daily life. It is a record of seasons, weather, silence, visitors, and survival.

It is about my garden, my flock, and the constant dialogue between human life and the natural world. I reflect on the people, animals, and unexpected presences that cross this small territory, all part of the same landscape.

Sanctuary also looks beyond my own fence, toward the original inhabitants of this region and also out into the wide changing world. It is both observation and memory, a refuge, but also a witness.