TEXIT: Strength-Based Life, Values, Home

Strength-Based Life, Values, Home

In a world constantly shifting, stories that make us reflect are rare. TEXIT: The Hour of Our Disunion isn’t just a fictional tale—it’s a reminder. A reminder of what it means to hold onto something real: our inner strength, the values we stand for, and the deep-rooted sense of home that never leaves us.

This book explores an imagined future where Texas moves back toward the independence it once enjoyed as a sovereign Republic before 1845. But the heart of the story isn’t about politics or secession—it’s about people. It’s about what happens when ordinary individuals are asked to rise, think for themselves, and face change with conviction and courage.

Finding Strength in Uncertain Times

One of the biggest takeaways from TEXIT is how people discover strength when life challenges their beliefs. The characters in the book aren’t superheroes or politicians —they’re teachers, neighbors, parents, and veterans. They find themselves standing at a crossroads and must decide what matters most. It can be wrenching.

This kind of strength is seldom loud. Sometimes it’s a small voice and personal. It’s shown in everyday choices and reminds us resilience doesn’t have to roar to make a positive difference. Change for the sake of change is restabilizing. Change to improve, expand or secure is positive change. Strive for that.

The Values We Carry Close To the Vest

Values like honesty, fairness, independence, and responsibility are woven into the fabric of this story. While the backdrop may be political, the real focus is ethical. It asks readers: What do you believe in when everything familiar is put to the test?

The characters in TEXIT don’t all agree. They argue, they struggle, and they doubt. But that’s the point. Real growth comes not from easy answers but from difficult conversations. Brain-storming. Closing gaps and stitching up bad feelings is also an art, you see. The book opens up space to think about personal values in a world where people often feel pressured to follow the crowd. And risk flat-lining.

Home Is More Than a Place to Hang Your Weapon

Perhaps the most powerful theme in TEXIT is the idea of home, hearth and rifles.. For some, home is a place. For others, it’s a set of memories, people, or principles. As the story unfolds, readers are invited to think about what home means to them.

Texas in TEXIT is painted as a symbol—a place with its own rhythm, culture, and way of doing things. But it’s not about saying one state is better than another. It’s about honoring and preserving heritage, and remembering that where we come from often shapes where we go next.

Folks in Texas have been known to fill a sandwich bag with raw dirt from out back and carry it in their pocket every time they board an airplane.

A Story That Sparks Reflection

While TEXIT: The Hour of Our Disunion is quasi-fiction, which leaves quite a lasting impression. It encourages the reader to reflect, question, and consider the deeper ideas behind the story.

Is it really about Texas leaving the union? Or is it about each of us taking a moment to rediscover our strength, reexamine our values, and reconnect with what home truly means? Let’s look at the United States. By first generation, a baby born in the US is talking with an American accent, that’s the melting pot. We speak American English, as opposed to British-English. We are Judeo-Christian. Go to Europe and walk around in Wranglers and see if they don’t know you are American and ask how much for the blue jeans.

A Book That Resonates Beyond the Page

What TEXIT offers is more than entertainment. It’s a thoughtful journey that invites readers to look inward. It’s a story that celebrates personal responsibility, open dialogue, and self-discovery. TEXIT reminds us of the power within each of us to stay grounded in our values, and never lose sight of what you call home.

Buy your copy of this book now.  This is your chance to read something evolutionary.

author

The Framers of the Constitution envisioned that state governments, not the national government, would be the main unit of government.