I believe deeply in the unseen. As a person of faith, I know that God does not reveal everything to us all at once. We are given enough light for the next step, not the entire path. Mystery is not the enemy of faith. It is often the space where faith grows stronger, where discernment develops, and where truth becomes personal rather than instructed.
That belief shapes the way I write.
I do answer the questions I raise in my books. Every mystery has a resolution. Every thread leads somewhere. What I choose not to do is explain the obvious. I trust my readers too much for that.
We live in a world that expects everything to be spelled out. But in real life, clarity often comes quietly. We notice patterns. We feel a shift in the room. We recognize truth not because it was announced, but because it resonated. I write in that same spirit.
Fear does not come from what we fully understand. It comes from what we almost understand. The moment when something clicks just enough for you to realize what is happening, without being told outright, is far more powerful than any explanation I could provide.
I respect the intuitive leap. I believe readers bring their own insight, experience, and faith into the story. When I allow space for that, the story becomes a shared experience rather than a lecture. The tension lingers. The meaning stays with you. The story continues long after the book is closed.
Think about the moments that unsettled you the most. They were rarely loud or over explained. They were subtle. A pause that lasted too long. A truth revealed sideways. A realization that arrived on its own. Those are the moments that feel real, because they mirror how life actually unfolds.
The unseen does not announce itself. It reveals itself to those who are paying attention.
So when something is implied rather than stated, when a presence is felt before it is named, know that it is intentional. I am not withholding answers. I am inviting discernment.
Not everything needs to be explained to be understood.
Some things are meant to be recognized.
So, when I don’t explain everything in my books, it is intentional. Some mysteries are not explainable on this side of heaven.