Tag: sera-lily-and-the-fox-prince

  • Navigating Shadows: Finding Strength in Connection

    Navigating Shadows: Finding Strength in Connection

    Sometimes the way out of the shadows is not through force, but choosing to move toward the light together.

    Two sisters holding hands on a misty forest path, walking beside a pale-tailed fox.
    Strength through togetherness.

    Sometimes it is easy to mistake the shadows for truth—especially when you’ve been walking in them for so long.

    Voices echo.

    Shapes distort.

    And what is real can begin to feel uncertain.

    This week’s Letter to the Netherwood is about togetherness. As practice. As a form of discernment. As a way back to truth when fear starts inventing endings in the silence.

    In Sera, Lily & The Fox Prince, Sera and Lily experience this again and again. The world shifts, the forest disguises itself, and doubt tries to blur what they know is real. But the turning point isn’t the absence of fear, nor is it a map.

    It is the decision to stay connected.

    There is a kind of strength that rises from standing beside one another, through the quiet presence of someone who does not turn away. Togetherness doesn’t always feel comforting. Sometimes it is simply proximity while your mind tries to spiral.

    But light returns differently when it is shared.

    It steadies.
    It clarifies.
    It reminds us what is real.

    If you’ve been walking through something heavy—if the shadows feel convincing, if your mind keeps trying to invent endings—this letter is a gentle invitation:

    Find one person. Reach. Not to be rescued, but to be accompanied.

    Where have you been trying to walk alone, and what would it look like to reach for togetherness this week as a way back to truth?

    Read the full letter on Substack: Strength Through Togetherness

    Yours in ink,

    Sabrina

  • The Unsung Cost of Our Society

    The Unsung Cost of Our Society

    The choice between providing and being present, and the family bond we build in the hours we’re given.

    Storybook-style painting of a mother and three children sitting together in a glowing forest clearing, symbolizing family bonds and quiet moments of wonder in the spirit of the Netherwood.

    Familial bonds are one of the core themes woven through Sera, Lily & The Fox Prince—not only between the two sisters, but through their mother, too. Even in the dark Netherwood, she is with them. In the lessons she taught. In the boundaries she held with gentleness. In the internal voice she helped shape inside her daughters.

    I wrote that relationship the way I hope to shape my own children.

    But I haven’t always been this version of myself.

    I became a mother at seventeen—young, independent, still wrapped up in the shallow worries of high school, and then suddenly confronted with a sacred new reality: someone else needed me. It brought me back to my center. It taught me what love asks of us.

    And then life demanded trade-offs.

    In the years that followed—through instability, a rocky first marriage, and the weight of being the provider—I entered the workforce and slowly fell prey to the corporate machine. Long days. Early drop-offs. Late pickups. Minutes together in the morning. An hour at night. Weekends filled with adventures meant to “make up for it.”

    But the truth is: when you’re gone that much, other people begin shaping your children’s inner world more than you do.

    The pandemic brought us home—and it showed me, with aching clarity, what presence actually does. It gave me the chance to relearn my children, to rebuild connection in the daily, and to rewrite the voices in their heads with kindness, steadiness, and truth.

    This week’s full Letters from the Netherwood letter goes deeper into that story—how familial bonds are built, what absence costs, and why so many parents are forced to choose between providing and being present.

    📜 Read the full letter on Substack: Unsung Cost of Our Current Society

    Question for you: Have you ever had to choose between providing and being present—and what’s one small way you protect your family bond this week inside the life you actually have?

    Content note: the full letter includes references to relational instability and abuse. Please read gently.

  • Navigating Trust and Trauma in Relationships

    Navigating Trust and Trauma in Relationships

    An Excerpt from Letters from the Netherwood

    Trust is one of the deepest themes woven into Sera, Lily, & The Fox Prince. Not as a soft idea, but as a backbone. As an invisible thread that holds when fear gets loud, and doubt tries to speak in a voice that sounds like your own.

    I didn’t realize how personal that theme was for me in my youth through my early twenties.

    There was a season in my life when I trusted with all of myself—open, full-bodied trust that didn’t keep a tally. And then, little by little, trust began to fracture. My parents divorced but remained close for a time… until a new influence entered the picture and relationships shifted in ways that changed the shape of my world. Later, in my early twenties, I found myself in a marriage where self-sacrifice was not romance—it was survival. If you want more of that context, it lives in my Wild-hearted Bravery letter.

    After enough breaks, I developed certain “truths” that were really just protection in disguise:

    Everyone will let me down eventually.
    Trust nobody.
    Enjoy it while you can… until the other shoe drops.

    That “other shoe” became an inevitability I carried—armor that felt like wisdom.

    But therapy, time, and healing love have taught me something different: trust can be rebuilt. Not blindly. Not perfectly. But humanly—through repair, understanding, and the steady proof of someone who continues to show up.

    This is the fervent kind of trust I wrote into the heart of the Netherwood. It is the kind that holds even when fear arrives wearing a familiar face.

    Read the full letter on Substack: Letters from the Netherwoodhttps://substack.com/home/post/p-189641086?source=queue

    Content note: the full letter includes references to divorce dynamics, relational trauma, and emotional abuse. Please read gently.

  • Explore the New Netherwood Bookmarks and Stickers

    Explore the New Netherwood Bookmarks and Stickers

    • Netherwood sticker bundle (3-pack) featuring quote sticker and Fox Prince designs from Sera, Lily & The Fox Prince.
    • Fox Prince sticker cutout from the Netherwood merch set. Bookish reader extra inspired by Sera, Lily & The Fox Prince.
    • Exclusive Netherwood Sticker from the Netherwood merch set. Bookish reader extra inspired by Sera, Lily & The Fox Prince.
    • Quote sticker from the Netherwood merch set. Bookish reader extra inspired by Sera, Lily & The Fox Prince.
    • The official Netherwood Bookmark. Bookish reader extra inspired by Sera, Lily & The Fox Prince.
    • Close-up of the official Netherwood Bookmark. Bookish reader extra inspired by Sera, Lily & The Fox Prince.

    Please help me welcome the Netherwood into the physical realm.

    I’ve been working hard behind the scenes to bring these pieces to life. I have been taking time proofing details, refining the feel, and making sure that our first pieces of merchandise feel like a true extension of Sera, Lily & The Fox Prince…not just “swag,” but a story that you can hold.

    If you have started your adventure into the Netherwood and you feel like you can practically step into it, this experience is my sought-after ideal state. This is the next best extension, with more immersive merchandise coming soon!

    Shop The Drop

    Bookmark Bundle: https://sabrina-giacalone.myshopify.com/products/sera-lily-the-fox-prince-bookmark-bundle

    Sticker Pack (3-pack): https://sabrina-giacalone.myshopify.com/products/sera-lily-the-fox-prince-sticker-bundle-3-pack?variant=43010610495601

    Bookmark: https://sabrina-giacalone.myshopify.com/products/sera-lily-the-fox-prince-bookmark?variant=43010610298993

    The First Official Merch Drop

    Now available in my official author shop on Shopify

    These were designed as reader keepsakes, little forget-me-not physical remembrances to keep on your bookshelf, planner, and the pages you return to over and over again. Little reminders of trust, friendship, and wild-hearted bravery.

    Bookmark Bundle – $16.99

    This is the bundle that you can bring with you, a portal you can tuck into your current chapter plus instant digital access so the story is always within reach.

    This includes, an official Netherwood Bookmark, instant access to the eBook, and companion materials.

    This is the easiest way to support the project and bring the story home in one click.

    Shop the Bookmark Bundle

    Sticker Bundle (3-pack) – $4.99

    If your kiddos are like mine, then these small pieces of the Netherwood are priceless. They can be scattered into real life to bring the Netherwood into the physical realm. Place them on a water bottle, laptop, or journal. Add them to your Kindle case, or anywhere you want a reminder of courage, friendship, and the kind of magic that asks you to bring your wild-hearted bravery.

    This includes, a quote sticker, a Fox Prince cutout, and an exclusive Netherwood-themed design.

    These are best for gifts, stocking stuffers, book decor, journaling, and really anywhere you can place a sticker!

    Shop the Sticker Bundle

    Official Netherwood Bookmark – $3.99

    Finally, we have our polished, collectible reader extra that makes this book feel real to me. This is made for people who underline lines, dog-ear pages, and keep a story close long after finishing the closing chapter.

    This is best for nightly reading rituals, a simple gift, or even your bookstagram flat lays!

    Shop the Bookmark

    Please consider supporting this project

    When you support this project, you are supporting more than a shop update.

    You’re helping me to keep building good-natured stories for our young people. Stories that are rooted in trust, friendship, sisterhood, and wild-hearted bravery. The kind of stories that leave readers feeling steadier, softer, and stronger.

    The simplest way is to buy a book. You can also add a little Netherwood keepsake to pair with this new read.

    Help me bring more light-forward fantasy into this world.

    And keep an eye out because more merch drops are coming soon, and they are genuinely so much fun. With each one, I think of my daughters, whom I wrote this story for.

    This is a small-batch first drop, and I will restock as quickly as I can depending on demand. If you have been waiting, I recommend grabbing what you want now so you don’t have to wait for the restock!

    If you’d like to be the first to know when the next items launch, join the newsletter or follow us on social media.

    Subscribe on Substack

    Your in Ink,

    Sabrina

    P.S. If you post your merch, tag me! I would love to come along for the adventure of seeing the Netherwood stepping into your world!

  • Integration: The One Key to Living Authentically

    Integration: The One Key to Living Authentically

    This is a note for anyone who’s ever felt they had to compartmentalize themselves to be accepted.

    Quote graphic on parchment with gold speckles and purple flourishes. Text reads: “You are who you are, every part of you.” — Sabrina Giacalone. Purple butterfly emblem at top and website at bottom.
    A reminder I’m carrying with me as I write and share this journey: you are who you are—every part of you.

    Today I am going to write something even more personal from me to you because I think someone out there needs permission to stop splitting themselves into pieces.

    After reading yesterday’s post, you might be wondering:

    “What on Earth could she be sharing today, considering her previous post?”

    First off, if you are new here, start with the aforementioned previous post, “Winter Has Never Been My Season.”

    Well, for a long time, I believed I had to present myself in pieces, depending on the room and who was in it with me.

    • There was the professional version for certain spaces.
    • The creative for private hours.
    • The spiritual kept soft, quiet, tucked away like something too tender to carry out loud.

    I am choosing to write this here, because maybe, just maybe, you know that feeling too.

    Like you have to edit yourself down to what’s easiest to understand. Like your joy needs a label, to be understood by others, to be valid and accepted in that room you are in. Like your depth needs to be toned down so it doesn’t make anyone uncomfortable.

    But here’s what I have learned–slowly, and sometimes the hard way:

    We are not meant to be split.

    We are not meant to be sorted into neat categories or compressed into one “acceptable” identity. You can be intelligent and imaginative at the very same time, and one does not detract from the other; it actually enhances it.

    You can be grounded and whimsical.

    You can be logical and deeply feeling.

    You can be ambitious and devoted.

    You can love structure and still crave mystery.

    You can be all of it, every single piece, even when it doesn’t “make sense” to others. I think it is because somewhere along the timeline, we were taught to be neat. Categorized. Easier to place. Easier to collect, even.

    And when you challenge that narrative of old, when you stop apologizing for your complexity, well, something beautiful happens.

    Your life starts to feel like it belongs to you again.

    That’s what I hope this space becomes– a soft space to land for the parts of you that don’t fit into just one box. A reminder that integration isn’t messy or confusing…it’s powerful! It’s the most honest kind of strength and bravery.

    It is also how this story came to be. This story holds the parts of me I used to keep separate.

    Sera, Lily & The Fox Prince is a portal, yes…but it’s also a mirror. It holds the themes I return to again and again: trust, courage, friendship, the ache of winter, the pull of the unknown…and the quiet, steady truth that love isn’t always loud, but it is always real.

    If you’ve ever felt pulled between who you are and who you’re “supposed” to be, this story was written for you, too.

    So if you’ve ever felt like you had to shrink yourself to be understood…

    This is your reminder:

    Leave a comment below if you are brave enough, tell me: “Where have you had to split yourself–work, creativity, faith, parenthood, relationships?”

    –Sabrina Giacalone

  • Winter has never been my season.

    Winter has never been my season.

    I’ve always been the kind of person who flinches at the first real cold snap. I count the days until the sun feels warm again. I treat January and February like something to endure rather than live inside of. Which is funny, in a way, considering I live in New England.

    I chose this. I built a life here.

    I know the rules: the gray, wintry skies, that gust of wind that just happens to find each and every seam in your coat, the way your bones feel the weather before your phone does.

    And still… every year, winter arrives, and I brace for it like an argument I didn’t ask to have.

    But this year, I made a decision.

    Not a dramatic, cinematic one—just a quiet vow I kept repeating to myself each time I felt the dread of the coldness of winter.

    I’m trying to fall in love with winter.

    The goal is not tolerate it. Not “make the best of it.” Not grit my teeth through it and reward myself later with spring.

    Fall in love.

    I wanted to stop treating the cold like an enemy and start treating it like a teacher. It should be like a season that belongs in the story of my life, instead of a long footnote between the chapters I actually enjoy.

    And winter, being winter, immediately tested me.

    We’ve had more snow this year than I can ever remember. Snow didn’t simply fall and melt politely in a day or two this season as it always has in the past. Instead, it piled and stayed. At one point, it felt like the world had narrowed to white and silence. Even now, there’s nearly two feet still on the ground, as if the earth itself is refusing to let go.

    It’s been the kind of winter that makes you understand why people used to fear it.

    The kind of winter that makes you wonder if spring will ever arrive again.

    And yet—this is the strange part—something in me has softened.

    Not fully. I’m not out here claiming I’ve become a winter person overnight, the kind who thrills at icy mornings. Though… I do have to admit that two pairs of nice wool socks are a game-changer!

    But I have almost stopped despising it.

    Almost.

    And I didn’t expect the thing that would help me get there would be… my own book.

    The Unexpected Gift of Returning to My Story

    Photograph of a coffee cup, black cat, and tablet displaying chapter 5 of the EBook version of Sera, Lily & The Fox Prince by Sabrina Giacalone.

    Lately, I’ve been rereading Sera, Lily & The Fox Prince.

    There’s a particular kind of vulnerability that comes with returning to something you made. When you’re drafting, you’re inside the work. You’re too close to it. You’re solving problems, shaping scenes, worrying about pacing and proofing, and the thousand tiny choices that make a world feel real.

    But when you reread it later, something changes.

    You become a reader again.

    And suddenly you’re seeing the world through your characters’ eyes—through Lily’s quiet steadiness, through Sera’s fierce warmth, through the way the forest breathes and watches and holds its secrets. Through my two daughters’ eyes.

    You remember not only what you wrote, but why you wrote it.

    And as I reread, I realized how much winter lives inside the book—not just as weather, but as metaphor.

    Winter in my story isn’t only cold. It’s a mood. A threshold. A proving ground.

    It’s the season that asks you whether you can keep your goodness when everything feels hard.

    Whether you can stay grateful when you are tired of being brave.

    Whether you can keep your love intact when the world tries to shrink it into survival.

    There’s a line in the book that has been echoing in my mind as the snow keeps lingering outside my windows:

    “Perhaps Winter is only lingering to see if we will still be grateful when Spring arrives.”

    When I wrote that, I knew it was true for the characters. I didn’t realize it would become true for me.

    Seeing Winter Through My Daughters’ Eyes

    Here’s the real truth underneath all of this: I wrote this book for my children.

    My daughters, especially.

    I wanted them to have a story that felt like a lantern. Something brave and tender. Something that reminds them that strength doesn’t always look like shouting—it can look like staying kind. Staying connected. Staying steady. Choosing good in a world full of temptation and distraction.

    And rereading the book now, in the middle of a relentless New England winter, I keep thinking about what they would notice.

    Children don’t look at winter the way adults do. Adults measure winter by its inconveniences: shoveling, icy roads, canceled plans, brutal cold.

    Kids measure winter in magic.

    They notice the hush that comes after snowfall, the way everything looks freshly remade. They notice the sparkle on branches. They notice how sound changes. They notice the way the world becomes a giant blank page.

    Even when they complain about it, they still feel the wonder.

    And somehow, rereading my own work has helped me borrow their eyes again.

    It has helped me see winter not only as something to survive an endure for a few months, but as something that holds beauty. Beauty that you can’t access in any other season.

    Winter has its own language. It speaks in quiet, in endurance, in small lights.

    Falling in Love Doesn’t Mean Pretending It’s Easy

    I used to think that if I couldn’t enjoy winter, it meant I was failing at gratitude. That I needed to move somewhere warm and tropical so I could enjoy the whole year.

    But I don’t believe that so much anymore.

    Trying to fall in love with winter doesn’t mean I have to pretend the cold isn’t hard. It doesn’t mean I have to romanticize exhaustion or ignore the heaviness that can come with long stretches of gray.

    It means I’m learning to stop fighting reality.

    It means I’m learning to ask: What is winter offering me, if I’m willing to receive it?

    Some days, the answer is simple.

    It offers me permission to slow down.

    It offers me the quiet I keep claiming I want.

    It reminds me that rest is not laziness.

    It offers me the truth that warmth feels warmer when you’ve known cold.

    And lately, it has offered me something else too, the strange, humbling experience of being comforted by my own words. Because I wrote them for a reason, and now I need them as well.

    Almost There

    I’m not fully in love with winter yet.

    But I’m closer than I’ve ever been.

    I’ve stopped glaring at the snow like it’s personally insulting me. I’ve started noticing the beauty in the way it collects on branches. I have fallen back in love with the magic of icicles. I’ve started lighting more fires to enjoy the coziness of it, rather than as an extra source of heat.

    I’ve started rereading the passages that feel like they were written to carry someone through.

    And sometimes, when I look out the window and see that the snow is still there—still deep, still bright, still refusing to leave—I don’t feel dread.

    I feel something gentler.

    I feel the smallest, most surprising flicker of affection. I see my daughters playing out in the snow and sense the magic they feel of the world being transformed before their very eyes. The way that you can see something so familiar transform into something anew.

    Maybe winter is lingering to see if I’ll still be grateful when spring arrives.

    Maybe winter is lingering to teach me how to be grateful before it does.

    Either way, I’m listening.

    And for the first time in a long time, I’m not only counting down the days until spring.

    I’m learning how to live inside the season I’m in.

    Text quote graphic on a cream background with icy tree branches and a small bird at the top, soft swirling wind lines and faint snowflakes behind the text, and snowdrifts at the bottom. Quote reads: “Perhaps Winter is only lingering to see if we will still be grateful when Spring arrives.” Attribution: Sera, Lily & The Fox Prince by Sabrina Giacalone, with a small purple butterfly emblem.

    If you are also trying to make peace with winter, I shared a companion reflection on Science with Sabrina.

  • Explore Sera, Lily & The Fox Prince on Amazon

    Sera, Lily & The Fox Prince is live on Amazon!

    Today is yet another remarkable milestone I have been dreaming about. Sera, Lily & The Fox Prince is officially available for purchase and download on Amazon and Kindle!

    Choose Your Reading Adventure

    Option 1: Kindle (Amazon) – $9.99

    If you love reading on your Kindle device or using the Kindle app, you can now get a copy directly through Amazon. It’s your very own copy to enjoy.

    Search for “Sera, Lily & The Fox Prince“, search my name, Sabrina Giacalone, or click here.

    Option 2: Direct Download From My Website – $14.99

    If you would like to support the book and me directly, you can purchase the Ebook from my website. This version includes bonus concept art. It serves as a thank-you for being an early reader. You are also helping me bring this world to life beyond this page!

    Your direct purchase from our website includes:

    • The Netherwood image download
    • The Kingdom of Light map download
    • Front Cover Art download
    • PDF Ebook
    • EPub Ebook

    Option 3: Pre-Order Your Hardcover Copy

    If you are like me, and prefer a hard copy to read, you will have to wait just a few more weeks. We are working together now with the printer to be able to bring this world into the physical realm.

    Along with your pre-order you will be receiving a few extra merchandise perks including:

    • Stickers
    • Bookmark
    • Print of The Netherwood

    Want to Support the Book in a HUGE Way?

    If you read and love it, please leave a review. This is one of the most powerful ways to help me as an indie author.

    No matter the format in which you read the book, please leave an honest review for me. You can do this either on the Contact page and/or on an Amazon review. It would mean the world to me!

    Even a few sentences make an enormous difference in visibility. They help the story find the readers it was written for.

    Are You Brave Enough to Adventure Into the Netherwood?

    Two sisters. One forbidden forest.

    Lily was named for the white lilies of the field, pale as winter moonlight, serene and thoughtful  until the moment her temper flashes and proves quiet does not mean weak. Sera—Seraphina—is honey-fire, quick-witted, fearless, and impossible to ignore, her laughter filling rooms as if it belongs there.

    They’ve been warned their whole lives to stay out of the Netherwood.

    But when the sisters rescue a small white fox and uncover a strange red-stoned pendant—an ancient relic whispered to be the Heart of Unity—they realize this isn’t just a haunted forest.

    It’s a curse.

    And the one who cast it is still out there: the Gnome, clever as poison, greedy as hunger, and obsessed with power—and with turning trust into a weapon. He doesn’t just want to win. He wants them to suffer.

    Now Lily’s quiet strength and Sera’s fire must hold against riddles, trials, and bargains designed to split them in two because the Netherwood doesn’t attack from the outside.

    It creeps in.

    It learns your voice.

    And it uses darkness to convince you to turn on the people you love most.

    …Welcome to The Netherwood

  • Sera, Lily & The Fox Prince: EBook Release

    Sera, Lily & The Fox Prince: EBook Release

    We are finally here. Sera, Lily & The Fox Prince is officially live—and I’m equal parts thrilled, grateful, and a little bit emotional, if I had to admit.

    If you’ve been following this journey, thank you so much for coming along on this adventure alongside me.

    If you’re just arriving: Welcome to the Netherwood!

    Where to Get the EBook

    1. Direct download from my website – $14.99
      • This option includes bonus concept art downloads as a thank-you for supporting the book directly.
    2. Kindle (Amazon) – $9.99
      • The Kindle listing is pending approval with Amazon. As soon as it is live, it’ll be available there at the Kindle price.
      • We have a pending 72 hour posting window as of February 7th, 2026

    Bonus: Concept Art Included

    You’ll receive a link to download the EBook once your purchase is confirmed. The link will also be sent to your email. You will also get a few special extras. These downloads include concept art bonuses that bring the world to life beyond the pages.

    Map Update

    The map is still being created, and I promise it’ll be worth the wait. If you purchase before the map is ready to download, you’ll still have access. This will happen as soon as the linework is finished and uploaded. No one is missing out–early readers will be first in line!

    Thank You for Being Here

    This story began as something I wanted to write for my daughters. It is a fantasy rooted in goodness and courage. It embodies the sort of love that holds steady when the world tries to pull you apart.

    And now it’s yours.

    If you read it, I’d love to hear what you think—your favorite line, your favorite character, the moment you felt the forest shift. Please submit an email on the Contact page.

    Share your experience and what you liked best about Sera, Lily & The Fox Prince.

    Welcome to the Netherwood.