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Wednesday, August 27, 2025

Behind the Scenes of A Paladin’s Vow: Isolde “Izzy” Thorne

Behind the Scenes of A Paladin’s Vow: Isolde “Izzy” Thorne

Isolde Thorne isn’t someone you meet and forget. She has that rare quality of making the extraordinary feel natural, of weaving together strength, playfulness, and heart until they’re impossible to separate. People call her Izzy — and the name fits. It carries the brightness and approachability that she herself radiates.

Izzy’s path was shaped early on by her connection to magic. Under the mentorship of Selene Awkwright, a witch whose name carries weight in arcane circles, she grew into her power with discipline and imagination. What stood out wasn’t just her talent for elemental spells or the versatility of her craft, but the way she approached magic as an extension of herself. She treats it with the same ease as conversation or breathing.

Elemental fire, protective wards, healing salves, even glamours to nudge perception — all of these are in her repertoire. But for Izzy, magic isn’t about what she can show off; it’s about what she can do for others. It’s the difference between conjuring flame to destroy, and conjuring warmth to protect.

If you expect Izzy to be serious all the time, you’ll be surprised. She has a keen appreciation for the ridiculous. Where others get weighed down by chaos or nonsense, Izzy tends to lean into it with a grin. It’s not that she can’t be serious — she absolutely can when the moment demands — but she refuses to let life become only grim struggle. Absurdity, to her, is part of what makes life worth living.

This lightness makes her disarming. Even in high-pressure moments, she can find a thread of humour, a small reminder that not everything has to be darkness and duty. It’s a quality that helps people breathe easier around her.

Izzy is perceptive in a way that goes beyond magic. She notices things: the unspoken hesitation in a colleague’s voice, the flicker of fear in someone’s eyes, the details others skim past. This emotional insight makes her invaluable, not just in crises but in everyday life.

She doesn’t posture. She doesn’t need to. Her long blonde hair, usually tied back when she’s working, her focused gaze, and her calm confidence make her memorable — but she never performs for attention. She’s at ease in her own skin, and that authenticity is what draws people to her.

Izzy inspires loyalty because she gives it freely. She stands by those she cares for with a kind of fierce gentleness — protective without being smothering, present without being overbearing. She is quick to comfort, but not afraid to challenge. Friends and colleagues alike know that when Izzy is with you, she is with you.

She’s also someone who values connection. That might come through in a shared laugh at the absurdity of a situation, or in the quiet reassurance she offers when someone is on the edge. Her relationships are built not on grand declarations, but on consistency — the steady presence that lets people know she’ll be there when it matters.

Izzy is, in many ways, a conduit. She belongs fully to the world of magic, but she never loses sight of the human side of things. Her command of spellcraft and ritual would be impressive enough, but what makes her remarkable is how she combines it with empathy, humour, and integrity. She is both the flame and the hand that steadies it.

What makes Izzy unforgettable is not just her power, but her perspective. She demonstrates that being strong isn’t only about wielding force — it’s about knowing when to listen, when to laugh, and when to stand firm. People gravitate toward her because she proves, again and again, that kindness and strength aren’t opposites. They are at their most powerful when they walk together.

Isolde Thorne is more than just a witch. She’s a reminder that in a world filled with darkness and uncertainty, compassion, humour, and quiet strength can be just as vital as any spell.

Wednesday, August 20, 2025

When Characters Become More Than Words

We all have our favourite characters — the ones whose victories we celebrate and whose losses we feel deep in our gut. They’re the voices we root for, the people we want to see succeed.

When I’m writing, I sometimes find myself forming that same attachment. Somewhere along the line, I stop feeling like I’m steering the story and more like I’m watching it unfold. Characters start to act as if they have their own wills, their own stubborn ways of surprising me. I’ll admit it — I play favourites.

The hardest part? Wanting to protect them. To give them the win. To hand over the happy ending. But stories — like life — don’t work that way. An unbeatable character would be flat, uninteresting. Aliens, one of my favourite films, wouldn’t be the same if Ripley was an invincible super-soldier. What makes her unforgettable is the fear, the struggle, the fact that she risked everything to protect others despite the terror clawing at her. Her grit and vulnerability are what make us care.

That’s why, as painful as it can be, our characters need to suffer. They need to lose. They need to face the dark before they earn the light. It’s what makes their victories matter — and what makes us love them all the more.

I won’t pretend I find it easy. Sometimes it feels cruel. But without adversity, there’s no growth. Without loss, there’s no real triumph.

How do you feel about this as a reader — or as a writer, if you are one? Do you struggle with letting your characters suffer? Or do you find it easier to put them through the fire, knowing it’ll forge them into something stronger?

Wednesday, August 13, 2025

Behind the Scenes of A Paladin’s Vow: Who is Gideon Voss?

Some time ago, a young paladin named Gideon Voss made a name for himself.

For as long as anyone could remember, Paladins and Witches had been at odds. Paladins feared the witches’ unpredictable magical potential, while witches resented the paladins’ rules and restrictions. Neither side would relent, and so fights — and even wars — were all too common.

Gideon Voss rose to prominence and eventually earned the rank of Justicar — a shining example of what a paladin should be. But behind that polished title, Gideon had lost his will to support the Order.

Years of battle, the defeat of witches, and the loss of friends had taken a heavy toll. The Order felt less like a protector of humanity and more like a repressive regime. Gideon’s faith in the institution crumbled — but in its place, he found a new faith: in people.

He had seen the worst of both sides — Justicars brutally attacking witches who wanted only to heal, and witches cursing gentle paladins with cruel magic. One meeting, however, would change his life forever: Isolde Thorne. When they first met, he hadn’t known she was a witch. As their bond grew, Gideon realised he could never again hunt her kind.

When the magical world and the “normal” world collided in a catastrophic event, Gideon saw not disaster, but opportunity — a chance to change things for the better. To become the bridge between the two worlds. To protect instead of harm. To end the conflict once and for all.

The weight of this mission rests heavily on his shoulders. It makes him short-tempered, irritable, and gruff. He has no hobbies, no possessions — only the relentless drive to make things better for everyone.

And yet, beneath that rough exterior lies a heart that is kind and gentle. He wants to help, to heal, to make things right. But for those who would deliberately inflict suffering on others? Gideon Voss has no mercy.

Wednesday, August 6, 2025

The Habit of Writing

I read Atomic Habits recently and found some of its suggestions really helpful. I’d definitely recommend it. The core idea is simple: build small habits and turn them into routines, so the things that matter always get done—even on the rough days.

One suggestion that stuck with me is this: make habits accessible. Remove the obstacles that get in your way before you even start.

For me, one of those obstacles was my laptop. Sounds weird—I love my laptop. It’s getting on a bit, so old I replaced the expiring copy of Windows with Ubuntu. But it still works, and I’m a big fan of mending things when they break rather than replacing them.

The problem is where it lives. It’s in the spare room, and it’s kind of a beast to lug out in the morning. So when I tried to combine my writing with my morning routine, that became a hurdle. Just the act of setting it up felt like too much friction when I was barely awake.

The better option turned out to be my phone.

I reorganised my files into a neat structure, added a few shortcuts, and now every morning I can just tap and open the doc I need. No setup. No resistance. I’ve cleared the path, and that’s made all the difference.

As I mentioned, I was aiming to combine the habit of writing with my existing morning routine. That’s another useful tip from Atomic Habits: habit stacking. You anchor a new habit to one that’s already established. That way, it becomes automatic over time.

So now, every morning, I wake up, journal, plan my day, then write for a bit—just ten minutes—before I move on to a short workout. I’m not a fan of gyms (but to each their own). This rhythm works for me.

The time limit helps too. Doing something—even something small—is better than doing nothing. Ten minutes a day doesn’t sound like much, but it adds up. It keeps the story moving forward, a little at a time, without pressure.

And the last piece of the puzzle? Forgiveness.

At just ten minutes a day, it’s easy to keep the streak going. But if I skip a day—if I’m not feeling it, or life gets in the way—that’s fine. No guilt. No regrets. I know I’ll be back at it tomorrow.

That, to me, is what makes a habit sustainable. Not perfection. Just progress.