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  • The Portland Review – Beltamar’s War.

    This review of the first novel in my series, Malmaxa, title “Beltamar’s War” appeared in The Portland Review, it is transcribed below.

    Beltamar’s War: Book I of Malmaxa

    Malmaxa: Treacherous Friends, Ancient Enemies, and a Dream That Can Save Them All

    5stars

    By C.G.Ayling
    Amazon Digital Services, Inc., $4.95, 395 pages

    C. G. Ayling’s Beltamar’s War is a captivating story that will leave you breathless until the end. Two competing but complimentary stories are told within the pages, one of warriors fighting against the Ancient Enemy and one of a family left at home, preparing for the pilgrimage to Malmaxa. It seems straightforward but soon the reader is entangled in the undercurrents of betrayal in a long-waged war and prophetic dreams that could spell the end, or beginning, of a new age in Malmaxa.

    There is a steep learning curve in the first few chapters. There are a lot of characters introduced in the beginning and it is hard to keep them separate until their personality traits are revealed. The world building is complex but Ayling provides a glossary at the end to help readers learn the words of this new world. However, once the reader gets fully immersed in the story, it’s engaging.

    Malmaxa is a complex world of rituals, history, and decorum, with a little mischief thrown in. Each of the characters struggle with internal demons whilst trying to keep true to the Immutable Laws. The depictions of the world are vivid and mysterious, from the multihued spines on the Segatto, to the symbolism of the Vision Quests, to Lineage Marks and the fear and terror that the groth and Grolem inflict. Readers will ask themselves questions about the identity and motive of the Ancient Enemy and will wonder how Liaju and Rethga are going to save the Seizen.

    Beltamar’s War ends abruptly with the fate of the warriors still unknown. There are a lot of unanswered questions about the groth, the mysterious Overseeers and how Liaju’s vision is going to come true. Thankfully, The Pilgrimage (the sequel)  is out already so readers can continue on in the world of Malmaxa. Download a copy of Beltamar’s War if you love epic fantasy with twists, turns, complex characters and mysterious worlds.

    Reviewed by D. Ann Williams

    Buy On Amazon

    {PS. The review also ran in the digital edition of the September issue, “The Portland Review“, where it appears on Page 7.}

  • The Sowing – a review.

    I recently finished reading an Advance Review Copy (ARC for short) of a Sci-Fi novel written by a trio of authors, one of whom I discovered on Twitter.  Before I begin my review, I feel the need to disclose a couple of things:–

    First, Amira Makansi was kind enough to review my novel “Beltamar’s War” on her blog {you can find her review here}.  I enjoyed Amira’s review so much that I offered to review her novel.  {Tit-for-Tat… oh no, I won’t play that.}

    Second, I am biased.  Not in favor of Amira, but against novels written by more than a single author.  You see I’ve always held that writing is an art, and art is the creation of an artist, not a committee.  Stacked atop that bias is my previous experience with such works, which I won’t name but which live in infamy in my memory.  When I discovered “The Sowing” is actually the result of co-operation between not two, but three people, my trepidation increased…

    Ok, disclosures complete, onward to the review!

    You’d think by my age I’d have learned a thing or two about stereotypes, and indeed I have.  Sadly, stereotypes generally do hold true.  However, occasionally they don’t – and it’s the don’ts we remember, more than the dos.  I’m happy to inform you that “The Sowing”, is most definitely a “don’t”.  I could not distinguish the individual styles of its authoresses.  You might think this means the writing lacks the vital, yet intangible quality known as voice – you’d be wrong.  Throughout the novel, the style is easy and effortless.  From its slow beginning to it climactic end, this smooth flowing tale is a joy to read.  Nothing jars, except of course the plot elements intended to put you on high alert – and those occur with an ever-increasing frequency as the world unfolds.

    Set in a dystopian future, “The Sowing” is neatly cast as Utopia.  Paradise lost, regained, and now guarded by people with only the best interests in heart.  Unfortunately, as the story unfolds it becomes clear that “the best interests” held are not those of the people, but of themselves.  Even Utopia has a seedy underside.

    “The Sowing” presents the viewpoint of two characters, their teen romance sundered by circumstance.  Remy, is a young lady working in the Resistance.  Vale is a young man working in the Okarian Sector.  After several years apart, they find themselves directly at odds as each struggles to understand the inexplicable choices of the other.  Remy wonders how Vale could possibly stay within, while Vale wonders why Remy has betrayed everything their sector has worked for centuries to accomplish.  Will teen romance wither and die, or simmer and flare?

    In essence, “The Sowing” introduces a classic premise – Evil Empire under attrition from a fledgling Resistance.  Although the story raises old questions, it manages to frame them in new ways.  Little is as it first appears, yet the authors retain their integrity through multiple plot twists and turns.  There is no gratuitous, random nonsense whose only purpose is fulfilling an editor’s perceived need for something that really has no part in the story.  No bumps appear to jar you from the path of this speeding tale.  Every new revelation renders the world more real, while ramping up tension and vesting you deeper in the developing characters.  Every time you think you know what comes next, the plot takes an unexpected, but believable twist.

    Your hopes for the main characters are constantly threatened, but the authors manage to tread the tripwire of suspense with aplomb.  Disaster looms, yet never quite consumes.  Even with the villains unmasked, their motivations remain hidden and leave the reader in a wonderful limbo – can something mitigate their actions?  It isn’t often villainy is portrayed with such subtlety you find yourself hoping something might excuse abhorrent behavior.  That type of sympathy abounds in “The Sowing”.  If you like your heroes pristine, and your villains cast in midnight black, then look elsewhere – in “The Sowing”, every character is… well, human.

    So what is “The Sowing”?  It’s a little bit of romance, a heaping helping of Sci-Fi, and a generous dose of metaphor.  It is today, cast in the future.  It is a simple tale which leads you down a complex path – personally, I think the path begins right here, right now, and that we might be its villains, which may account for why I feel sympathetic to those within the tale.

    Now, I don’t know about you, but for me one of the things I most enjoy about fiction is being surprised.  “The Sowing” doesn’t stop surprising.  Enough said?

    {Now, while you’re here please take a look around, you can find samples of my writing, my tweets and even another review I wrote for an amazing love story by February Grace, another Twitter friend.}

  • Friends.

    A poem, prompted by thoughts of friendship, especially… the friends we’ll never see.

    Friends.

    Friends don’t let wrong
    distract you from the right.
    Into the abyss,
    true Friends
    won’t let you slide,
    no, true Friends will hold you up,
    they never stand aside,
    when from ugly truth
    we’d hide.
    Too often we all
    will slip,
    but true Friends
    will never let us fall.
    True Friends…
    they help us to stand tall.
    ~
    When what we say seems wrong,
    true Friends will set us right.
    For us they’ll always fight.
    From our battles true,
    true Friends never take flight.
    Yet when our motives are askew,
    our Friends will follow through,
    they’ll save us from our plight,
    and shield us,
    from our due.
    ~
    Friends,
    they drag us to the light,
    when toward the dark we tend,
    true Friends…
    their love will never end.
    Though we stress them sore,
    true Friends will bar wrong’s door.
    Then those same Friends
    will let us pass,
    when others would slam salvation’s gate.
    Friends don’t hem us in,
    when from their beliefs we stray,
    though Friends will let us,
    should we choose,
    they’ll never force us…
    to pray.
    ~
    True Friends don’t forget,
    neither do they forgive,
    yet true Friends do understand,
    so include true Friends,
    in all of your plans.
    Friends don’t step aside,
    when we need them most,
    true Friends
    stand at our side.
    ~
    What is a true Friend’s role?
    That,
    my unseen Friend,
    is to keep you,
    on the path
    toward your goal.
    ~

    {It’s a little rough around the edges, but then again, so is true friendship. :)}

  • Where we’d rather be.

    Where we’d rather be

    This world is not the place
    for those likened unto me.
    For them, to Heaven’s song
    of bliss they’d hark.
    Could be I’m wrong,
    as I’m so often told I be.
    To Hell, better suited
    for those so wrong in heart,
    they’d not grant the wayward
    a fig leaf, for a start.
    ~
    Heaven,
    or Hell’s seeds have you sown?
    Where’d you rather be…?
    A place of peace,
    calm as cloud blown
    fore a gentle breeze.
    Or that other,
    warmer…
    where waters never freeze.
    ~
    Think long, for in this life
    you’ll choose.
    Spend well your wealth,
    while you have time.
    Before this life you lose.
    For then,
    judged by naught save
    owned earthly deed,
    the decision comes
    with what some
    may deem
    an entirely ungodly speed.
    ~
    To your earthy wealth cling tight
    as downward then you’ll plummet
    hands bound to the very anchor,
    that raised you high, toward mortal summit.
    No passage onward can be bought
    with earthly spoil,
    so foul.
    Oh no,
    rich one…
    for you awaits Hell’s eternal toil.
    ~

    {More philosophies, cast as fantasy you might find, here.}

  • too many people to #FF

    Having missed Follow Friday last week, I find myself with list of people too long to #FF while within Twitter. So instead here is my list. If you wish you can click the links, or just copy them into a spreadsheet and process them there. Although they’re in deliberately randomized order every one of them is worth interacting with.

    @Tiny_CJ
    @Tao23
    @transparency_a1
    @WTJowett
    @MuirMurdoch
    @theskinnybee
    @ellipticalnight
    @RandmLawlessnes
    @ntombinster
    @kristenhinkson
    @GetOnDeeZ1111
    @Antonyt75544550
    @nancy_dobson
    @khukhwana
    @HeightsOfLife
    @MikaChef
    @ShePlaysLoud
    @justdavenow
    @leah_artiste
    @ozigeekette
    @raiphsays
    @bl4ckr0s3xo
    @sebhowley
    @citazonsViesis
    @KimJGaneWCPosse
    @ChicorelliStar
    @Leahcar2
    @candledrop1
    @RenaKat_
    @adventurer_josh
    @hollywood_95_69
    @DeanaMSmith1
    @feesat_gaily
    @PoetSayings
    @DutchieBird
    @laurelworlds
    @margaret_629
    @WeAreRosie
    @alamantra
    @KNycole_Lee
    @AyanaTomeka
    @13thEnumeration
    @microbe_74
    @sihorrock
    @poetreats
    @rubinred
    @InfoBears
    @GeneralMom
    @Such_Video
    @PatrickEgan8
    @Jamie_Adams22
    @Cynthia_418
    @Radznanda
    @Momoclonsmoney
    @devalier_warren
    @JTatolo2
    @haikuclouds
    @unconsmile
    @StunnaVivRipSam
    @yog_path
    @drwfair
    @charmzci
    @Sidney_Williams
    @SocialChalleng1
    @BrighterSideBlg
    @john_symond
    @Midnite_Musings
    @SakerioNY
    @remittancegirl
    @Roe_The
    @UknoU_wantIT
    @HeatherJPreston
    @SofiaBlueStar
    @ArbitraryDesign
    @SuzetteNeptune
    @Deb_Libby
    @SaySandra
    @bobbyflyby
    @cookiespaws
    @confettiofwords
    @Andstillsmiling
    @sokaelgato
    @sanjeebdas0
    @vneethnair
    @simthesisss
    @rocketart
    @noor_sindi
    @SteezGod
    @LatoyaLonelodge
    @Astraica
    @peach83352
    @TerlokyanFritz
    @FreeFSUDating
    @harperdimmerman
    @mslogophiliac
    @jasbrai
    @1easyedog
    @jon2905
    @akmakansi
    @123Scotland
    @chuddles11
    @Debbie_Strange
    @DespicibleMe
    @Chic__Jewel
    @ClaireyCraw
    @suzy2anyone
    @StephanieHodso1
    @SeattleKinkette
    @MrCasablanca41
    @seanbedlam
    @Noveltunity
    @muirin70
    @LovesWaterViews
    @kashisH2so4
    @HeatherPresto11
    @MyDerailedBrain
    @chinahutch82718
    @Hroadie
    @dushbar
    @Canadian_Cath
    @TeresaBohannon
    @LAWoman2013
    @justBigjoe
    @stgreenie
    @MaskedBandita
    @CandleSkull
    @encycl
    @jadendiebold
    @BeansIsFrank
    @Twisted327
    @stadia1
    @UrsusAbstrusus
    @AnneofPVS
    @ljgrodecki
    @ThoughtsIncorp
    @ninasATV
    @loosie_lostit
    @MrHashington
    @uggleeduckling
    @Myoregoncoast98
    @PatrickJayPerry
    @Jenny__Wong
    @BaconEnvelope
    @labrontheowl
    @ShaktiWGSFem2
    @corneliagracchi
    @AmandaMThrasher
    @handyyam
    @sarahsarahpeace
    @cathyfed205
    @tracidolan
    @nechakogal
    @YoungMumKate
    @sherrymok8478
    @KelaLewisMorin
    @DivaTomboy
    @RebekahDaniel14
    @LMB_poetry
    @Keoma3021
    @OneManAgenda
    @iheartart8
    @Maxinumber9
    @pjgills1996
    @denzel662
    @christinastriga
    @SoulAtum_91
    @The_Poppermost
    @Kaith16
    @erichb3
    @HeleKive
    @rrrifay
    @brknphtgrph17
    @cedrixclarke
    @TheBinkyAnnexe
    @MoonbeamMcQueen
    @SinnaptixEdits
    @Ratinevo
    @RKTLivinit
    @chel5eadawn
    @Into_the_Never
    @rumor_imbris
    @Ks_Freckles
    @MrWilson1884
    @Britpoptarts
    @wendysredryon
    @FadingSpiral
    @CG6212
    @LionHereWriting
    @mcknick85
    @jameswhughes
    @nozzie4u
    @myraness
    @black_swayed
    @SueCurd
    @Dporfann
    @joypathall
    @VinderosClub
    @jascharff
    @KhaledTalib
    @KaneLatranz
    @Cory21311812
    @jrodwyer
    @Caboome_Ebook
    @Ali20586
    @Miss_Mia238
    @jathavedankm
    @jMMkWilmot
    @JeremyD03971634
    @iamkringlozano
    @lucylingphotos
    @_____Allie_____
    @Ken_Eriqume
    @isayhumor
    @aqheflin
    @collinsmaryh
    @Hvnsglow
    @offgrid
    @DeeBeeCool
    @respect65
    @Micropan44
    @cfpublish
    @carloradio1
    @jahan_tyson
    @MsTrustMe
    @nycedaze_
    @MariaxTurtle
    @six4certain
    @DoubleInfiinity
    @ChooseYourMood
    @catethetwaate
    @MMl71
    @SoccrChikaita15
    @WakeUpDanny
    @FebruaryGrace
    @EliasMcClellan
    @Mimikyo_Geisha
    @SylvesterPoetry
    @EricaTucciMuse
    @indieKari
    @ttb4nyg_tim
    @OfficialZak1
    @parasnarf
    @imajumaican
    @RangeelaDesi
    @ntyag
    @AndrewDrapier
    @whistle39
    @camillecologon
    @shameeba
    @Amoreamiraa
    @Misti_Haze
    @AndrienScoton
    @kaleighp3
    @liveclearnofear
    @BaranEmelie
    @patti_lynn519
    @MAMyers217
    @Tuigen
    @BhaktiBrophy
    @jsatisfiction
    @uphill_climb
    @PentacleSun
    @Aggro_Adam
    @kendahkhalil
    @pinkiedoodlene
    @grantmaxwell
    @gypsyskylark
    @ElliePatten
    @MadelineAshwell
    @JFrankDunkin
    @Pinky_0917
    @gooodthang
    @debz0570
    @chibidrac
    @sibyls_idyl
    @parv88
    @IJustWantToBeM1
    @MarkSwain4
    @rbholbrook
    @Idlerwheel
    @LeoOras
    @TereMarabe
    @thirdysmom
    @GumpinHD
    @AMWesterling
    @teby123
    @wordsmithwoman
    @bagmansgirl
    @kimboo_york
    @originalsindah
    @VictoriaKante
    @IBumbybee
    @shandsmurph
    @iHiBa_
    @MassabrinaM
    @ccarrwrites
    @call_me_inga
    @susanmurphyinc
    @Charlaughs
    @AdrianLYouseman
    @Jaynawty
    @ProductPoet
    @Chickfighter1
    @Jacqueline_Czel
    @PolicyVote
    @irarawls2we1
    @hilmiahmad77
    @Parsifane
    @PatriciaRSchole
    @MarlaAMadison
    @ABEdmanGoewey
    @AChosenWord
    @CRLeeAuthor
    @DazedColours
    @nocoolshakes
    @AnnZuccardy
    @PeterR99
    @cldavieswriter
    @BethOnSecrets
    @AaronJCW
    @jhunjhunwala_g
    @lau_sengo
    @arwenchandler
    @Deborah_Odell
    @dragonspassion
    @iamthecritic
    @BenjaminKillian
    @patrickdupont
    @dewilliams29
    @ishmealssk
    @MarinaLatcko
    @OneVoiceMatters
    @falling_fly
    @_BrookLancaster
    @Evi_Zahne
    @prettycrazy27
    @smartnfunny
    @AuntyNittyno1
    @iamnotfine
    @Shermanomaly
    @msjackien
    @Swamii_says
    @missrobinson222
    @JoanneHichens
    @DavittCP
    @porld_weace
    @YourFeistyAngel
    @insomnia6998
    @borismomma
    @Chonnymo
    @onemaddaddy
    @Slygirl08
    @channreaction
    @bonnie_hake
    @WritingRosie
    @Av_Gas
    @robfourseven
    @sfc1953
    @KimBru49
    @chova_g
    @manifest_1
    @John_L_Harmon
    @acollectivsoul
    @RestlessSpirit3
    @LaurenPrasad
    @TimDaBeard24
    @PhebeOhYes
    @soniashetty2
    @Evan0ra
    @AuthorDianaArco
    @kikorp2000
    @PunkRockPoet84
    @Creative_Poetry
    @AmorScribendi
    @lcmissfixit11
    @SmrtBobo
    @WhatCanBeWorse
    @twps
    @__kamoo
    @HeartLove69118
    @AequatioDei
    @RajeshKayakkal
    @SoulInWords
    @babsthehat
    @WildeOscarCat
    @SesshaBatto
    @AlpacaJo
    @pharmtastic
    @donnamcsays
    @DetroitGirl_
    @todobien2012
    @khanasifzafar
    @PlanetPeaky
    @4theluvofLit
    @marciaanthony
    @jeffersonguedes
    @PsycheWizard
    @livingindie13
    @MotsErotica
    @JohnnyFloydIV
    @UFOGnostic
    @YourBookShopper
    @elevensages
    @the1likenevL
    @sonallakhanpal
    @judi_sutherland
    @bpl
    @RomaDuke
    @awilgarden
    @walsh_drake
    @Anlayca
    @telljinno
    @kv8
    @KatherineCarol
    @Michael56984009
    @EmariValdicar
    @rozc74
    @DavidThinksAlot
    @robbiepoet
    @Luv_Adventures
    @AlonnaJ85
    @entrebat
    @rhramseydreamer
    @ninkejvr
    @SweeteRae
    @linap
    @livyrozaay
    @StephPrime69
    @Karimomof3
    @WilliamBatisDr
    @Nicholas_A_Rose
    @Exreverend
    @Arourasangels
    @celebutardz
    @tunlish
    @bichonscot1
    @FarishaRmz
    @kc_davies
    @flagrntdisrgard
    @expendablemudge
    @EzraTawil5
    @R11Shawn
    @DarlinNatalie
    @burstofbrill
    @koko_fung
    @MichaelDMatula
    @roushpau
    @ThePotentMu
    @Christineyr
    @sgebru
    @MrsLinley76
    @hahnsmith
    @walter_matthews
    @nigelmcbain
    @lollis72
    @Parasnarf
    @marlongmurray
    @PoetryOfLyme
    @Unbreak_AbleMe
    @semlouise
    @saintcecile14
    @letterbowl
    @HarryLime19
    @derkins_susie
    @JohnAtlanta
    @AishaJemima
    @surfeitndearth
    @heygemini
    @TheBookNymph
    @marthaHigh
    @HopeM1008
    @bitgit
    @PureDoe
    @thebooknymph
    @HayleyLugassy
    @dreadheadmonk
    @Jannagae

  • To Mr. Edward Snowden, a Hero.

    As anyone who follows me on Twitter knows, I’ve been in a particularly bleak mood this last week. I’ve attributed part of my poor mood to the moon in perigee, but that is only part of the truth. Another is that I am sorely afflicted with realization that my naturalized home, the USA, is losing its way. To me, the United States is a nation that holds the rule of law and personal freedom to be sacrosanct.

    Apparently, this vital truth is no more. Perhaps I am naïve.

    Edward Snowden brought down that house of cards with his revealing the appalling extent of the NSA’s illegal and immoral surveillance of innocent people, quite literally, everywhere.

    What happened to “probable cause”? Mr. Snowden has my utmost respect now, and let me be the first to tell you that he always will. I don’t care what evidence of law-breaking the government stacks against him – and yes, I chose the word “stacks” with deliberate intent.

    However this filthy affair of a government that has lost its way eventually turns out, Edward Snowden did the morally correct thing – he refused to remain silent in the face of grievous and excessive abuse of governmental powers.

    Yes, he may have broken the letter of some law, however he did so in order to reveal a moral miss-step by an abusive and intrusive security agency that has chosen to break a far more binding code – namely the Constitution of the United States, the Fourth Amendment of which states, “The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

    Try and twist it as you will, I will simply read the words written – they require no interpretation.

    Sadly, I expect the government to continue down the path of shame they have chosen. A path of spin, where they attempt to distract the Citizens of this great country from their blatant disregard for our Constitution. The rest of the world isn’t falling for it, what makes them think their own Citizens will?

    As for you, President Obama, I am shocked that a former Constitutional lawyer such as you can be so misguided you resort to making speeches in support of this indefensible action by a rogue security agency. For shame!

    I am not a law-breaker, and I do not advocate the breaking of just laws. Indeed, I once instructed my eldest daughter that when one chooses to live in society, one must abide by society’s rules – regardless of how ridiculous those rules might be. If recollection serves, I said something along these lines, “If society passes a law stating you may not wear yellow on a Wednesday, then you may not wear yellow on a Wednesday. You can’t choose which laws you’ll obey, and which you will ignore – if you don’t agree with the law then lobby to have it changed, but obey it until you succeed in having it overturned.

    So how can I now openly support a man who has broken certain laws? Simple, Mr. Snowden’s moral code bound him to reveal a particularly egregious violation of every single United States Citizen’s Constitutional Rights. The US Constitution is the supreme law in these United States – nobody may break its binding moral code, and that nobody includes whatever government happens to be in power.

    Mr. Edward Snowden is a Hero in my book, and should be lauded as such by every law-abiding US Citizen.

    With passage of the “Patriot Act”, the US government overstepped its bounds – it crossed a line clearly drawn in the sand by the most sacred document of this nation. It is time for our government to hang its head in shame and repeal that foul and unconstitutional law. President Obama had the chance to let the “Patriot Act” lapse. What a sad day for America and the entire free world when he succumbed to the siren song of power perceived, and held the US Government above its own laws – by re-signing the bill into law.

    For shame…

  • Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

    During my Friday lunch break my wife sprang a sudden question, “Do you suffer from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder?” Powerful emotion immediately overcame me, I turned to the window and gazed out of it for the minute or so it took me to regain emotional control.  Without meeting her eyes, for I had no desire for her to see the remnants of tears in my own, I replied, “Yes, I think I do.”

    This prompted a tweet a little later,

    At lunch today my wife asked “Do you suffer from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder?” As I blinked away a tear, and hid, I knew, I did and do.

    My companions on Twitter responded with mostly silent support, which I greatly appreciate as talking about my own emotional pain does little to lessen it for me.  However posting about it isn’t really talking, it’s simply speaking without the fear someone will ask piercing questions that re-open old wounds. Thus this post.

    Well then, what is PTSD? The National Institute of Mental Health define it in this article “What is Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)

    As a combat veteran, I’m a candidate for the NIMH’s classic definition.  Of their list of symptoms, I regularly experience all but two – namely, “Having trouble remembering the dangerous event”, and “Being easily startled”.  Indeed, sometimes I rather wish I suffered from memory problems of so specific a nature that I could forget everything bad that ever happened. {Actually I don’t wish anything of the sort, for reasons I’ll explain later}.

    That said, as with many things my own understanding and definition of the term PTSD differs from the widely accepted.  I believe anyone who suffers mental trauma of a particularly unpleasant nature is a candidate for PTSD.  I have no doubt this ailment is far more widespread than the NIMH’s restrictive definition implies.  I don’t think drugs are the solution. In fact, I don’t consider PTSD an ailment at all.  In my opinion, it’s a learned response intended to keep us out of danger by ensuring we don’t forget the events leading to our traumatic experience.

    As Jorge Agustín Nicolás Ruiz de Santayana y Borrás, or George Santayana, once said, “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”

    Yes, the effects of PTSD are debilitating, but would I give up my most terrible memories to gain relief?  I would not.  You see those memories, perhaps even more so than the actual events, are factors that have shaped me into who I am.  I lived through the events only once.  Yet I’ve repeatedly relived them in my memory.  Repetition is an age old mechanism of learning.

    Yes, I often loathe myself for the things I’ve done, the stances I never took, the words I never said, the things I didn’t do yet know I should have.  However without those events, and especially the memories of them, I simply would not be me.  I’m not saying I love myself and that you should too.  Not at all.  However after decades I’m finally finding peace and I sincerely hope sharing my thoughts might aid any of you who have ever suffered from any truly traumatic event.  For me sympathizing with other helps, where having others offer sympathy to me does not.

    With the type of memories that my personal PTSD invokes in mind, I wrote two poems, which follow.  I hope they strike a chord within you and that perhaps you enjoy the second.

    <<-0->>

    ~ Memory, of Pain ~
    ~
    Memories I ever dread,
    yet know
    will come again.
    Memory, of pride and duty,
    then memory, of their disdain.
    Memory, of pain.
    ~
    Memory, of valor,
    of selfless acts, and tragedy.
    Memory, of loss,
    then memory, of disdain.
    Memory, of pain.
    ~
    Memory, of high regard,
    of sacrifice and atrocity.
    Memory, of shame,
    then memory, of my disdain.
    Memory, of pain.
    ~
    Memories that take
    much more than they give.
    Memories that tear themselves apart,
    and then themselves, rebuild again.
    Memories for all time,
    that each recollection redefines.
    Memory, of pain.
    ~
    Memories of guilt
    at others’ blood we spilt.
    Memories we can’t refute,
    for our guilt seems absolute.
    Memories, of why.
    Memories that always make us cry.
    Memory, of pain.
    ~
    Memories of joy we treasure.,
    Even as memories of pain
    we lay to rest,
    as from their memory
    we refrain.
    Memory, of pain.
    ~
    Who knows what
    our memories will unearth?
    And with their resurrection
    grant our forgotten pain,
    rebirth.
    Memory, of pain.
    ~
    Alas, only Warriors from the fray
    will ever fully know
    how terrible was the day,
    when conscience
    struck
    us down.
    Memory, of pain.
    ~
    A bitter pill indeed…
    to know we did
    no good.
    Memory, of pain.
    ~
    Memories forever remain.
    Memories, of mine…
    These memories…
    are the memories
    that
    our character define.
    Memory, of mine.
    ~

    <<-0->>

    And now, as reward for those that read this far, a lighter poem.  Hopefully it will ease you from any anguish invoked by the first.

    ~ Memory, of Youth ~
    ~
    Flowing circles,
    drawing closer, then away.
    Trigger words, and trigger sounds,
    so many triggers, for memories abound.
    ~
    A gleam of light,
    a shadowed figure passing by,
    a sidelong glance, a down-turned eye.
    Sympathy perceived, or offered
    seldom fail
    to unlock memory’s coffers.
    ~
    A wafting wind brings to mind
    a youth long lost.
    Memory, our lost youth will find
    and full strength, to us return
    the dreams we had, the dreams,
    that burn.
    ~
    Remembered dreams will we hold tight
    before reluctant, we them release.
    Our slow drooping eye heralds sleep’s return,
    Where we will find fresh dreams,
    fresh hopes,
    of peace.
    ~
    Slumber grants new dreams,
    we clench and grasp them, tight
    but still we feel them slip away
    as we awaken,
    to a newborn day.
    ~

    {Thank you for reading. Please remember I’m an author, your support in purchasing my works would be most gratefully received. If interested, head on over to [Samples], where you can read the opening of the first novel in my Epic, Malmaxa.}

  • Father’s Day, 2013

    Happy Father’s Day to every father, and for the men not yet fathers, may you one day know the joy of comforting a tiny part of you as your own child lies within your cradling arms.

    My Father’s day began poorly, but has since improved. I’m working on a blog post about Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, and while that is in progress, for publication later today, I thought I’d share my Father’s Day gifts with any who care to read them.

    My favorite eldest daughter, Tamryn, mother of our only grandchild, Eden, is engaged in making her husband’s Father’s Day the special day it should be, yet she still took time to text me a Father’s Day wish. “A text”, you say?  Yes, and special it is, because like me, Tamryn doesn’t embrace texting as a preferred form of communication – which makes a text from her, well… special.

    From my favorite middle daughter, Dannielle.

    @CGAyling He’s brilliant, witty (at least he thinks so), selfless, an amazing author and everything he does is for his family. Iloveyou Dad!

    My favorite, and only, son is away at a wrestling camp, however he wished me Happy Father’s Day before he left yesterday, along with a hug, gratefully received.

    From my favorite youngest daughter, Julia, I received a haiku – her first ever and all the more special for that, along with a poem. I reproduce them both, below.

    Julia’s Haiku

    As well as samurai
    I write this haiku today
    For the din of man.
    ~

    Julia’s Poem

    Father father

    Father father hear my cry,
    A cry that bears resemblance to yours.
    A cry that shows we care and that we love too strongly,
    the cry of the bull headed manner we use.

    Father father see my scratches and battle scars,
    These show my efforts to change a stone world,
    and scratch at my very being.

    Father father I see your weather worn face.
    I see the spark that Has gone out in your eyes,
    This must once have been a roaring fire.

    Father father I now know that you simply survive
    but father father I will live on in your name
    and I will hold close to me what is dear to you.

    And for that Father Father
    I thank you.

    ~

    {PS. While you’re here, please look around – especially at the [Samples]}

  • Dannielle, a symbol for serenity.

    Today, is a very special day – it is my favorite middle daughter’s 24th Birthday.

    Thinking back to that joyous day now twenty-four years past, brings to mind a tweet I recently posted, and likely prompted by realization this day dawned:-

    Regardless of our circumstances, our character is our own. #thought

    Until Dannielle’s birth, we had assumed that the parents influenced the character of their children.  Dannielle gave us clues to her character even before her birth, and those clues pointed toward something entirely different to her decisive elder sister.

    Born screaming, her sister Tamryn never stopped to draw breath for the first six weeks of her existence.  Once during that dismal time, overcome with exhaustion from the two hours on, two hours off schedule tending our firstborn, I turned to my wife and said, “I can’t believe anyone in their right mind would ever consider having another child.”  Our experience with Tamryn led us to believe her behavior was the norm.  Oh, how soon we forget…

    Three years later, contraception failed us again, and my wife conceived our second – Dannielle.  With Dannielle, everything was different.  In-utero, Tamryn had been a kicker whose extended legs would often distend my wife’s tummy into exotic, distorted shapes.  In contrast, Dannielle proved calm to the point that we worried, unable to find solace in our pediatrician’s promises the pregnancy progressed perfectly to plan.

    At the eleventh hour, Dannielle changed her mind and rotated one hundred and eighty degrees from vertex into a breech.  No amount of cajoling could convince her to return her head to downward.  {Two of her character traits, perfectly illustrated before her birth – indecision, neatly combined with obstinacy.}  Dannielle’s birth was by emergency Cesarean Section, she exited the womb wide-eyed, and silent.  Indeed, when hanging Dannielle upside down by her feet simply granted her a new and even more fascinating view of this new world, the doctor had to beat her first cry from her.

    For the most part Dannielle retained her calm, serene nature – though she occasionally succumbs to what she terms, “insta-pissed”.

    Enough of this rambling!  Like each of her siblings, Dannielle brings us immense joy, spiced with dashes heartache and woe.  She has grown from a beautiful, serene baby upon whom I doted, to a beautiful, serene twenty-four year old, upon whom I dote.

    We’re blessed with four unique children – indeed, they are so different from one another we sometimes find it hard to believe they’re progeny of the same parents.  Each owns their character, utterly.  Perhaps we’ve managed to modify their behavior somewhat, but their character is entirely theirs – and has been from the moment of their birth, if not their conception.

    Happy Birthday, Dannielle – may you have many more, and may you remain your wonderful self, always.  No other way would I want you to be.

    {For those who would know, Dannielle is not only the cover model of my work, Beltamar’s War, but also takes the role of Daniskira, the Symbologist – whose character is a poor reflection of hers.}

  • The Z-Axis.

    A review by Amira K. Makansi, originally hosted on her blog, “The Z Axis.”  The full, un-edited text of Amira’s review appears below.

    Book Review: “Beltamar’s War (Malmaxa)” by C.G. Ayling

    I was really thrilled to have the opportunity to read and review BELTAMAR’S WAR by C. G. Ayling, a writer who I met and communicated with on Twitter and with whose writing I was impressed. I’m always a little nervous when I agree to read and review self-published books – I’ve read a fair few that have not merited the effort to finish the first few chapters, and have resulted in a waste of my time as well as a waste of the author’s. (I’ve also read a book or two by authors with whom I was initially impressed, and then when I opened the pages I was disappointed.) But there are gems out there – you just have to search for them. Imran Siddiq was one of them. (If you haven’t read my review of his Disconnect, please do, and follow him on Twitter.) Now, I have the pleasure of adding C.G. Ayling to the list of gems I have had the good fortune to find via Twitter.

    C.G. Ayling’s epic fantasy novel BELTAMAR’S WAR is set in the world of Malmaxa, and it’s clear that worldbuilding is one of Ayling’s strengths. Malmaxa is a fascinating place, and I enjoyed every little piece of new information I learned about the world. The Seizen, as the humans who inhabit this world are called, have a series of strange and fascinating rituals and magical abilities that were beautifully crafted and described. From the Chukras, the gems that give the Seizen their strength and skills, to the “marks” (aka tattoos) that define them as individuals and decorate their arms in deference to their ancestors, to the rules of the Gods that define their lives, Ayling’s world is vivid, complex, and mysterious.

    There are two stories that are told simultaneously. One is set in a peaceful village as the villagers prepare for the annual Convocation, which is the time of the year when all Seizen gather in the capital city to give new adults their Chukra, find a match (aka get married), and (presumably) worship the Gods. This plot line essentially follows one family as they prepare for the Convocation. The other half of the story is set with Ripkira, a battalion commander who faces off against a horde of groth, also known as the Ancient Enemy – vicious hounds who will rend the Seizen limb for limb and hunt them ruthlessly, unless the Seizen armies can hold them at bay.

    Ayling’s characters are his second great strength. As we follow these dual storylines, each character is well-developed and complex, as though Ayling knows them personally and summoned their strange and exotic souls to appear before us on paper (or the magnetic lighting of a Kindle, in my case). The only thing that could be said of them is that they are, perhaps, a little too perfect – though Ayling is careful to give them each a set of interesting, tangible flaws, rarely do any of them make the wrong decision, and if they do, they are contrite and honest about their failings. Their nobility and goodness is honorable – perhaps a little too much so. In fact, there is only one character in the book with anything resembling an evil streak. I’d like to see more of him in Book 2 – I’d like also to see his past and character deepened, so that we understand where his evil originates.

    And of course, there is the strength of the writing itself. I only caught two typos in the whole book – an impressive feat for an indie. Ayling’s writing is strong and charismatic, almost Biblical, as though it carries the weight of both mythology and history wrapped into one. There’s one scene, about two thirds of the way through, that entranced me: one of the younger characters, Rethga, embarks on what’s called a Vision Quest, which is basically a hallucinogen-inspired dream. The scene that follows is written like something out of Homer’s Odyssey. It brings symbolism, fantasy, and discovery equally to fruit as Rethga searches for his true identity, and the narrative style is magnificent.

    In fact, there’s only one real problem with the book (though it might be, to some, a large and glaring problem): Nothing really happens. Throughout the whole book. There’s one battle, which is a fairly climactic scene, but it doesn’t really lead anywhere and nothing ultimately comes of it. The plot meanders, by which I mean to say that things happen to the characters, and they interact in meaningful ways, but nothing really significant happens in terms of developing the plot or pushing the conflict along. We never really find out what the major conflict is, actually – is it the Seizen versus their Ancient Enemy, the groth? Is it the Seizen versus the Gods, as they struggle to control their fate? Is it Seizen versus Seizen as they fight to control evil in their midst? Early on, it seems as though the whole book is building towards some climactic confrontation, some war, or something grand that will happen at the Convocation – but it never comes. Nothing major ever happens. Where is the conflict? What are we building to, and what can we expect in the sequels?

    Now, please understand – all this really means is that I will be eagerly anticipating the sequel. Despite the rather bizarre lack of a driving plot, the book’s positive features, which I’ve outlined above, are enough to keep me interested – and more. I know there’s something big coming in the world of Malmaxa, and honestly, I can’t wait to find out what that is.

    Overall, a well-written, character-driven book that’s left me thirsting for more. I’m fudging on the rating on this one – I’m giving it 3.5 / 5 stars. Normally the lack of major plot action would be a big enough issue to drop it down to a three, but I so enjoyed the world, the characters, and the writing that I can’t bear to do that. So, 3.5 will have to suffice.

    Recommended for fans of Lord of the Rings, Daughter of Smoke and Bone, fantastical worlds, and creativity. Link to the Amazon purchase site is here.