Why I Wrote The Forgotten Sky

For as long as I can remember, I’ve asked questions that made people uncomfortable—the kind of questions that peel back layers, unsettle assumptions, and challenge what we’ve always been told is “just the way it is.” Even as a child, I sensed there was more than what met the eye. More to faith. More to history. More to this world.

The Forgotten Sky came from years of wrestling—years of digging into the gaps between Scripture and science, between what the Bible says and what modern institutions declare as fact. I started noticing that some of the so-called “conspiracies” weren’t as far-fetched as I’d thought. In fact, some were simply truths hiding in plain sight—buried under decades of programming, repetition, and cultural dogma.

One of the biggest cracks in the narrative came when I began studying the firmament. Not just as a poetic image or metaphor—but as a real, physical reality described in Genesis and referenced throughout Scripture. What does it mean when the Bible says God “separated the waters from the waters” and placed a firmament in between? Why do we dismiss that imagery while embracing other parts of the text as literal? These were the questions that pulled me deeper—and once I started down that rabbit hole, there was no turning back.

I read. I researched. I questioned everything. I even managed to convince my dad to start asking questions about the moon landing. (He’s not fully on board yet, but he’s digging!) My dad often reminds me, “Does this really matter in light of eternity?” And to a point, he’s right. None of this overrides the simplicity and power of the gospel. But for me—this search is worship.

It’s worship because I believe God is Truth—not just in some abstract moral sense, but in a deeply real and present way. When I pursue truth, even when it’s messy or unpopular, I’m honoring the One who authored reality itself. I’m saying, “God, I want to see the world the way You made it—not the way man has repackaged it.”

Jesus said, “Seek and you will find.” That command isn’t shallow—it’s sacred. Seeking truth is seeking Him. It requires humility, discernment, and faith. It means holding up everything we’ve been taught—even the things that seem “settled”—to the light of His Word and asking, What’s real? What’s Yours?

And that’s what The Forgotten Sky became. Not just a story about a woman uncovering hidden knowledge—but a reflection of a spiritual journey. A battle between light and darkness, deception and discernment, heaven and earth. It’s fiction, but it’s woven from real questions, real research, and a hunger for the truth behind the veil.

This is just the beginning of The Veiled Truth Chronicles, a series that will dive even deeper into suppressed history, spiritual warfare, and the biblical lens we’ve lost. My hope isn’t to convince everyone of one particular theory, but to stir something deeper: a desire to seek. To wonder. To worship through the pursuit of truth.

Because sometimes, fiction is the only way to tell the truth.
And sometimes, seeking the truth is the highest form of worship.

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