Thursday, November 12, 2015

Beginnings of my Scifi Doomsday book



Continued work on my "End of Civilization by Coronal Mass Ejection" book today. 

 Outlining and research in narrative form of cast of major characters and events. 
Still working on a title, but the above will suffice for now.
(Note: Copyright laws apply, all rights to materials on this blog are retained 
by Mary E. Hennessy unless attributed to other sources.)

Nicole White and Collin Callahan met through mutual friends at a barbecue in 2015. They immediately were drawn to each other by common interests in music and science. Both were imbued with a strong work ethic, so more often than not, courtship involved texting and phone calls. None the less, the relationship grew and they were married within two years.  

Nicole's mother died when she was 16 in a car accident followed by her father's death just months after the wedding from pneumonia. Her parents and grandparents had no siblings. This left Nicole with no blood relatives except for some distant cousins through her great-grandparents, none of whom she had ever met or communicated. 


Collin Callahan was born as the youngest of 2 brothers and in between 2 sisters. Collin's father became convinced after the 9/11 terrorist attacks that he needed to protect his family from catastrophes and became a doomsday prepper. The family moved to the Blue Ridge in Virginia and started building a survivalist compound. 

As each sibling finished school they began building two other compounds in mountainous areas, one outside of Asheville, North Carolina and one in the Rockies. They figured with each of them in different areas there was a bigger chance of some of them surviving what they were sure would come to pass, if not in their lifetimes, then in their children’s. Collin’s sister, Daimhin (pronounced Dahveen), went to medical school and started a practice in Asheville, so that she and Collin could build the compound together. Oldest brother, Adair, and youngest sister, Brigit, settled in Colorado. Adair was a dentist at the Air Force Academy and Brigit a surgical nurse at Children’s Hospital in Colorado Springs. They began building on a large property just west of Manitou Springs, Colorado. 


After learning of the Solar Superstorm that only missed Earth by a week in July 2012, the Callahans stepped up their dedication to ensuring disasters, both natural and human-caused, were survivable for themselves and select friends. Collin was a building contractor and spent all his free time working on their compound. Married in 2017, Nicole Callahan, took the job as administrative assistant for Daimhin’s medical practice. She also spent time looking for people to bring into their circle that would be assets in a crisis. Thinking long term and operating on the premise that civilization would be knocked back centuries, she looked for those skilled in husbandry and farming, hunting and fishing, weaving and sewing, metalsmithing and mining, whatever skills and occupations they were sure to need to survive. 

Daimhin kept her eye out for likely medical people including researchers. Collin looked for likely people in all facets of construction and engineering. People with multiple skills were of particular interest to the family. Those with military or police service or trained in survival skills including combat were towards the top of the list. Unrelated people with children were also towards the top. By the time Collin married Nicole the compound was ready to support 50 people. 

Within 5 years they were able to shelter up to 400.  In 2023 each of the 4 compounds had staffed and was housing ethnically and educationally diverse populations in the hundreds. Hundreds more were on the outside working hard to help support the survivalist mission. The groups were in communication with other survivalist groups around the world with many working in areas for prevention of some of the effects of power grid failure, such as nuclear reactor meltdown at power plants. Most of the US East Coast was in the danger zones of fallout from nuclear radiation if meltdown were to occur. 

By 2022 money, lobbying and research following the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster in Japan had retrofitted plants with passive cooling systems or shutdown most of the world’s nuclear reactors. As the world began to embrace safer, renewable sources of energy the chances of radiation from reactor meltdown was nearly eradicated. The survivalist community was greatly relieved. Never-the-less those with survivalist goals were placed as employees in the at-risk plants to ensure safe shut down of reactors in the event a disaster would occur.



 January 5, 2024, at 14:18 military time NASA and NOAA issue a warning that a solar storm from a huge coronal mass ejection on our sun would reach Earth in as little as 12 hours. People were warned to get as far underground as possible and to stay in place for up to 36 hours. Estimates were that the event would be at peak for anywhere between 24 and 36 hours. In the U.S., the people associated with the Callahan compounds and many other survivalist groups were in protected shelter within 6 hours. The U.S. government had evacuated top level employees and their families to facilities in Colorado, Nevada and West Virginia. It was speculated that no more than 5000 were completely safe from the the solar storm. Those unprepared faced a survival rate the government estimated to be only 5 to 10 percent of the population in the first year following the solar storm. No one knew what the effects would actually be on the human body but there were more knowns than unknowns.


The Government experts were wrong. Ninety-five percent were dead in the first month. People in cities died more quickly with no electricity to run heating systems and provide sources of water and food. Many people froze to death in the first days following the destruction of the power grid. Within a week many more were dead from mob violence and looters. Fires burned unchecked and food became scarce. Two weeks after the event, people who had kept safe to that point were starting to die of starvation and had begun to resort to cannibalism. Those with medical needs died from lack of proper care or necessary medications. Cities became wastelands of the dead and decaying. 

The fall of civilization did not discriminate between the rich or the poor, the young or the old. City-dwelling doomsday preppers survived longer than those who had not prepared at all. It was just a matter of time for those who stayed in the city with no other place to go. The ability to travel was limited to walking and in the cold of winter through snow, kept most people in place to survive as best they could. Those in warmer climates lasted longer, but not by much, as violence and starvation brought much death. Rotting corpses brought disease. It also became apparent that many people’s minds had been damaged by the extraordinarily high electro-magnetic pulse that hit Earth. Behavior of the unlucky affected was very like that of Alzheimer’s patients. Many people lost their memories and became incapable of caring for themselves while some became violent. Those with damaged minds did not last long.


Small towns and rural areas fared better where people were more self-reliant to begin with. If they survived the winter and into the next growing season they were likely to make it through the chaos of the first months and years. People who heated with wood and had a sufficient supply source did not freeze to death. Those with canned goods, stocked root cellars and farm animals, particularly chickens and dairy cows for eggs and milk did not starve. Wells deep enough not to freeze and with manual pumps to back up electric pumps ensured those people did not suffer from lack of water. 


Unfortunately, with the lack of power, dams and locks began to fail and cause flooding with resultant loss of life near lakes and rivers. Of the 340 million in the U.S. alive on January 12, 2024, as winter turned faded to April only 1 million 700 thousand had survived those first 4 months. With 12 billion world-wide in the days before what became known at The Event, the best estimates were that only 84 million survived those first few months. Projections were that it would take 10 to 20 years to re-build power grids with the condition that those left could solidify into cooperative societies. 

To be continued and expanded as the mood to write hits me.........
Please let me know if you think I have flaws in my science!

Friday, November 6, 2015






It is easy to be stuck on the miserable. I choose to think of my life as always leading me somewhere interesting. The trick is dealing with and changing the things you hate in a positive way and coping with the things you can't change. I find inspiration in the strength of friends. 

The past year and a half have been extremely tough for one friend in particular. He oldest son died in an awful car crash. The strength she has had to keep putting one foot in front of the other and carrying on is an awesome thing to behold. She has worked through despair and immeasurable pain to endure and thrive. I have been blessed to be her friend and share her journey. 


Thursday, November 5, 2015

My homage to this morning:


I. 

Awoke to puppy kiss
paws to chest, nose to wet nose
now she snores again

II.

Fog kisses the grass
dripping from wires and branches
warm and dry inside

III. 

Nature's elixir 
morning coffee calls my name
wake up with steamy goodness