How to NOT Make Things Worse
How to NOT Make Things Worse is a practical book about what people do in the heat of the moment that turns a hard situation into a worse one.
Dedicated to her daughter-in-law, Bianca, Stevens deals with the things that usually do the damage first. Talking too fast. Reacting before thinking. Pushing when backing off would have done more good. Trying to fix pain with more pressure. Saying the extra thing that did not need saying.
Thomas Patrick Adam
Thomas Patrick Adam is a man writing from memory, loss, faith, and recovery.
In the early pages of his biography, he moves between two very different parts of life. One is childhood wonder. He remembers a trip to England at age seven with his grandmother, grandfather, mother, and sister, and writes about old cottages, black wood beams, broad gardens, green hills, and the kind of family memories that stay bright across the years. Those recollections carry warmth, detail, and a real sense of place.
A Systemic Constitutional Quandary
A Veteran’s Journey Into Constitutional Activism
Robert Herget never intended to be an activist. A retired U.S. Army Combat Engineer, small business owner, and devoted husband and father, he was content coaching high school baseball and building his family’s life in York County, Virginia.
But when his wife took a courageous stand to expose documented vaccine adverse effects, everything changed. What began as a family’s mission to protect children evolved into a profound exploration of constitutional principles, the role of local government, and the urgent need for citizens to reclaim their responsibility to their communities.
Robert Herget
Robert Herget is a Constitutional Conservative, a retired U.S. Army Combat Engineer, and a small business owner. From 1985 to 2003, he served his nation with distinction, training thousands of young men and women for military service across multiple installations and roles.
After his military career, Herget and his wife built a business and raised their family in York County, Virginia. His journey into civic activism was born from a deep-seated belief in the principles of the U.S. Constitution and a desire to secure the blessings of liberty for his children and grandchildren.
Estranged
Estranged is a deeply personal book about the grief of family separation, the long ache of silence, and the painful work of looking honestly at your own part in a broken relationship.
Gina Stevens writes from the place many parents know but few can easily explain: loving an adult child who has become distant, carrying years of unanswered questions, and trying to understand what happened without turning the story into blame.
Unbecoming the Victim by Gina Stevens
Gina Stevens
Gina Stevens writes plainspoken nonfiction about accountability, estrangement, restraint, family conflict, and the damage people can do when emotion outruns judgment.
Her work is direct, personal, and rooted in lived experience. She writes about the hard parts of human relationships without dressing them up, excusing them away, or turning them into slogans.
Her books include Unbecoming the Victim, Estranged:

