Share your story with the world — publish your article today!

The Day the Sky Broke

views
Nasim Kerbalai Book AERIEL blog banner 1

Then, for a brief moment, the sky ceased to lie, silent and broken.

In AERIAL (The Ascension Trilogy Book 2) by Enn Kae, that moment arrives like a prophecy fulfilled. Jan Lam, through her awakening and unrelenting search for truth, breaks the planetary grid that had long hidden the real sky from human eyes. What follows is a collapse of an illusion that birthed a world torn in two. One bathed in artificial daylight, the other steeped in a new and terrifying night. And with it, Earth itself splits, not physically, but spiritually, psychically, irrevocably.

The old world clings to what it knows. These are the Day-Dreamers, living by the rules written in fading ink: governments, religions, and routines. They shut the curtains. They curse the night. They pretend that the cosmos still revolves around them and that the sky is just a sky.

But the veil has been torn for Jan, and the stars are alive. Reality reveals a cosmic dance of beings and dimensions, a fabricated illusion hidden for aeons behind a pixelated hologram. And some are listening. Some are waking. These are the New Earthers.

Jan’s journey into the night sky is not one of wonder alone. It is a descent into chaos, into a realm where nothing can be unknowable again. She meets beings of light and terror. She sees the machinery of manipulation—the Orion Group, soul farms, and cosmic treaties that use humanity like currency. She sees how Earth’s wars, its media, even its religions are part of a control system designed to keep us docile, dreaming, distracted.

And yet, many refuse to awaken.

Why? Because awakening hurts. Because it means giving up the comforting lie of normalcy. Because when the sky breaks, nothing can be trusted—not even yourself.

But there is another side to this fracture.

In the darkness, something else is born. The New Earth that Jan glimpses is not simply a place but a frequency. It is a state of consciousness, one where humanity lives with its galactic families, both good and evil.

AERIAL doesn’t ask you to believe in aliens or breakaway civilizations. It asks if you’re willing to consider the possibility that what you call reality is a program. Is the world we are living in glitched, curated, and tightly controlled by other civilizations? .

If so. What will you do when the sky breaks and the reality reverberates in front of your eyes? Will you walk blindly in artificial light? Or will you step into the dark and see the stars for what they truly are? Would you be prepared to lead yourself, observers, and witnesses?

Similar to AERIAL,” we, too, live in a split world. It is a world where facts bend, where narratives fracture. It is a world where people walk the same streets but live in entirely different realities. It is a divided world, but not by oceans. It is divided by belief, perception, and frequency. Like Jan’s Earth, our lives teeter on a threshold. Do we have the courage to see it and change our realities?

In AERIAL, the second installment of The Ascension Trilogy by Enn Kae, Earth stands on the brink of cosmic revelation. After shattering the planetary grid, Jan Lam exposes a universe far more intricate and dangerous than humanity ever imagined. By night, Earth reveals its true face: a portal to the stars, watched over by galactic beings both benevolent and malevolent. As Jan is pulled into the heart of an interstellar struggle, she must confront ancient forces, hidden truths, and the illusion that has enslaved humanity for centuries. Torn between two worlds, Day-Dreamers and New-Earthers, Jan becomes the reluctant key to Earth’s ascension. Will she be able to maintain the balance? Only reading this book will lead to a conclusion.

Grab your copy on Amazon to learn more: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DBJDV4NN.

Leave a Comment

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
WhatsApp
Telegram
Tumblr

Related Articles