Behind My Cyborg Romance: A Personal History Written in Alloy and Memory

Cyborg romance didn’t begin for me as a grand plan. It began the way many creative obsessions do—quietly, unexpectedly, with a spark that formed long before I realized it would become an entire universe. Long before I ever wrote a cyborg hero, I was already captivated by science fiction and the emotional possibilities within it.

My love of science fiction didn’t begin with books—it began on the floor of our living room, watching Superman on a black-and-white television.
Strange visitor from another planet with powers beyond those of mortal men.

Those words lit a spark in me before I even understood what story or genre meant. A few years later, when I was about eight, I watched the 1951 film The Day the Earth Stood Still. I was mesmerized. Even then, I wanted Klaatu—the alien—to fall in love with the boy’s mother. Of course, that didn’t happen, but the idea stayed with me.

Looking back, I think Superman and Klaatu were the first seeds of the sci-fi romance author I would eventually become.

Years later, I watched the 2008 version with Keanu Reeves. Critics weren’t kind, but I loved it. The impact of that original story never left me. It shaped the way I see aliens, humanity, connection, and the tension between fear and wonder.

Where Cyborgs First Entered My Imagination

My fascination with cyborgs started even earlier than I realized.
It was the era of The Six Million Dollar Man.

Steve Austin—test pilot, survivor of a catastrophic accident, rebuilt with biomechanical limbs and enhanced senses—was my first exposure to what we would now call cybernetics. The show called them “bionics,” but they were close enough to the cybernetic enhancements I’d later give my own cyborg heroes. It was impossible not to imagine: what would it be like to be rebuilt stronger, faster, tougher… and still so deeply human?

Even today, I can see the roots of my cyborg romances in that series.

Growing Up in the Shadow of Loss

My childhood was a mix of good memories and painful ones.
My parents split when I was around four. Not long after, my mother met someone and decided to move to California with him. The problem was, I couldn’t go—I needed surgery that was the difference between life and death.

My grandparents stepped in. They told her she could leave, but she wasn’t taking us with her.

I didn’t understand the details until much later, but the result was the same:
my mother left for California without me or my brothers.

She visited me once in the hospital, and then she was gone again.
While my grandparents gave us a loving, stable home, I lived with the quiet ache of abandonment. That wound never fully healed. It shaped me, and it shaped the characters I would one day write.

Looking back, I can see how those feelings of loss and displacement seeped into The Aledan Series, where Chelle grieves her mother’s death and Hankura is sent away to another world for his own safety. Fiction often reveals the truths we carry.

Early Adulthood: Love, Hope, and Hard Turns

I married at nineteen and had one child, full of hope for the future. But life had other plans.

My husband developed severe back problems that required major surgery and ended his career. I went to work. Then I lost my job. We moved to the city. Then to the country. Living in the mountains near West Virginia was one of my favorite chapters—growing vegetables, making homemade bread, raising our daughter with a simpler way of life.

But my husband lost his job again.
We moved again.
And that was the beginning of the end of our marriage.

A few years later, I became a single mother trying to build a life for the two of us. During that time, I was shopping The Aledan Psion to publishers and thought I’d finally found one—an independent publisher who loved the story. But his business never got off the ground, and the deal vanished.

Reality hit hard.
I became a small-town newspaper reporter for about nine months, but the pay didn’t cover basic bills. My estranged husband could barely support himself, let alone help us. I crashed into a deep depression and couldn’t work for a while.

Rebuilding: One Step at a Time

Therapy helped pull me back.
Three years of unpacking old wounds, learning resilience, and trying to breathe again.

When I was finally able, I went back to school—determined to become employable and give my daughter a stable home. I took writing courses and computer classes. I hated the math in programming, so I dropped that track, but I learned computers well enough to stand out.

I worked in a factory for two years while finishing school.
I taught myself transcription.
I learned secretarial skills.

Eventually, I walked into a temp agency and walked out with jobs in clerical work and computer operations. That led to a position in a doctor’s office where I stayed for ten years—despite the fifty-mile commute through brutal Western New York winters.

Later, I found a job closer to home and spent another fifteen years in a hospital administrative department. Through it all, writing stayed on the back burner.

But not forever.

The Return to Writing — and the Shift Toward Cyborgs

Somewhere in those years—maybe during a quiet evening, maybe during a long winter—I started writing again. Retirement was coming eventually, and I knew I wanted to become an indie author. That dream had never died; it had only waited.

By then, I had completed two space opera romance series and fully established my Aledan Universe.

But when I discovered Cynthia Sax’s early cyborg romances, something clicked. The stories reminded me of everything I had loved as a child:

  • Superman’s alien loneliness
  • Klaatu’s quiet otherness
  • Steve Austin’s cybernetic rebirth

It all converged.

I borrowed some elements common to the genre—like genetic mates—but beyond that, everything diverged into the universe that already lived inside me. My cyborgs were born from the ashes of the Aledan war, from humanity’s desperation, from the science and trauma and resilience woven through my worlds.

And maybe, if I’m honest, from my own longing.

**Fated mates. Genetic bonds.

A love that cannot abandon you.
A partner who will never leave you behind.**

After failed romances and the lingering shadow of early abandonment, it’s no surprise my heart turned toward stories of men who love fiercely, permanently, and without hesitation. That theme isn’t accidental—it’s emotional truth, transformed into fiction.

Where Cyborg Lore Came Together

The final spark came when I read a story where cyborg warriors were promised mates once they returned home from war. Something about that concept struck home—deeply and personally. It connected with the unresolved pieces of my own past and the emotional scars that shaped me.

From that moment, everything in my universe aligned:

  • My world had cyborg soldiers engineered for a war against the Mesaarkans.
  • That war created a surplus of never-awakened cyborgs in stasis.
  • These men survived a conflict they never truly lived through.
  • And they were waiting—quietly, unknowingly—for a chance at life, identity, and love.

It all fit.
It all made sense.
And that’s how my cyborg romances truly began.


Part 1 — How Cyborg Romance Found Me

Cyborg Vyken Dark is looking for survivors in the Chicago ruins.

Cyborg romance didn’t begin for me as a grand story plan. It began the way many creative obsessions do—quietly, unexpectedly, with a seed that took root long before I realized what it would become.

Long before I ever wrote a cyborg hero, I was already captivated by science fiction. Not just the starships and alien worlds, but the human stories: outcasts trying to belong, survivors rebuilding after loss, ordinary people discovering extraordinary strength. Those themes shaped my imagination from childhood and later became the emotional foundations of my romance worlds.

But the road to my cyborg universe truly began when I started reading cyborg romance—particularly Cynthia Sax’s early series. Her stories presented a new kind of hero: powerful, enhanced, engineered, but deeply emotional and vulnerable. These men weren’t just soldiers—they were survivors longing for connection. I devoured every cyborg romance I could find, but at the same time, something in my own writing universe had already prepared the ground for cyborgs long before I wrote the first one.

How My Aledan Universe Laid the First Foundation

Years before my cyborgs took shape, I was deep into creating the Aledan Series, with a richly detailed history that stretched across galaxies and centuries. In that timeline, Earth suffered a catastrophic alien retaliation after a disastrous first-contact mission. A geological expedition trespassed on an alien world, panicked, and murdered nearly the entire native team. Only one alien escaped and reported the atrocity to his people.

The response nearly destroyed Earth.

Cities were devastated. Communications collapsed. Entire populations were displaced. Humanity was forced into survival mode.

That war—its destruction, its trauma, and its long aftermath—became the backdrop for my future cyborg world. The idea that humanity had barely survived left an enduring question:

How would a fractured, wounded Earth defend itself if the threat returned?

The answer, at least in my universe, was the creation of cybernetically and genetically enhanced protectors.

Why Cyborg Romance Felt Like the Perfect Match

Science fiction romance blends two genres I have always adored: the limitless wonder of sci-fi and the emotional resonance of romance. Cyborgs sit at the perfect intersection of those worlds. They allow a writer to explore:

  • What does it mean to be human?
  • Can a man engineered for war learn to love?
  • How does trauma shape identity—and healing?
  • What happens when the world you were built for no longer exists?

A cyborg is a contradiction: part machine, part man, designed for combat yet capable of profound tenderness. Writing romance for characters like that is endlessly rewarding, because their journey isn’t just about falling in love. It’s about rediscovering their own humanity.

The deeper truth is that these themes echo parts of my own life.

Growing up, I never quite fit in. My mind was always in the stars, in comic-book universes, in worlds filled with psions, aliens, and heroes who battled impossible odds. I often felt like the odd one out—too imaginative, too different—and those feelings became part of the emotional heart of my cyborgs. They are outsiders seeking belonging. They are men created for a purpose who must find a life beyond it.

The First Threads of the Cyborg Universe

Once I realized the alien war from the Aledan timeline created a natural need for enhanced defenders, the structure of my cyborg universe formed quickly.

During the war:

  • Earth didn’t know how long the conflict would last.
  • Cybernetic soldier production continued nonstop.
  • Research and development pushed new breakthroughs.
  • More cyborg units were built than could be awakened immediately.

The plan was simple:
Keep making cyborgs until Earth no longer faced extinction.

Some cyborg units were awakened immediately and became frontline soldiers.
Others were kept in reserve—fully developed, fully programmed, and preserved in stasis—waiting for the moment they would be needed.

But the war ended abruptly.

Earth survived, but civilization was shattered. The infrastructure to support millions of people vanished. Entire industries collapsed. Rural enclaves formed out of necessity. Cities became ruins or rebuilding hubs.

And in hidden stasis vaults in a secret underground facility near Chicago and one in Peru thousands of cyborgs remained asleep, never deployed, their lives on pause until someone awakened them.

This is one of the most important aspects of my cyborg universe:

**None of the cyborgs were deactivated.

They were never awakened in the first place.**

When Vyken Dark returned to Earth, he did so knowing that countless cyborgs—his brothers—were still waiting in stasis chambers.
Waiting for a world that had almost been destroyed.
Waiting for a purpose that no longer existed.
Waiting for a chance at life, connection, and love.

This truth shapes every cyborg series I write.

Why These Stories Matter to Me

Cyborg romance gives me a canvas for exploring deeper emotional themes:

  • Survival after trauma
  • Rebuilding when everything is lost
  • Finding love in the ruins
  • Learning to trust again
  • Creating community out of chaos

All of these reflect human resilience. They reflect my own journey through difficult moments of life, and maybe that’s why the stories resonate with readers as well. My cyborgs aren’t just warriors—they are symbols of hope.

In the ashes of a broken society, they rise.
In the loneliness of being engineered for war, they find love.
In the uncertainty of awakening without a purpose, they create new futures.

What This Blog Series Will Explore Next

This is only the beginning. Over the next four posts, I’ll take you deeper into:

Part 2 — A Personal History Written in Alloy and Memory

How childhood experiences, outsider feelings, and early sci-fi fandom shaped my universe.

Part 3 — Building the Cyborg Guardians Universe

Behind-the-scenes worldbuilding, including Gretchen, Montana and the timeline connecting each series.

Part 4 — Cyborgs, Trauma, and the Genetic Mate Bond

Why the mate-bond trope is so powerful and emotionally resonant.

Part 5 — Rebuilding Love After the World Falls Apart

The emotional thesis of my cyborg romance worlds and why I will always write them.

Worldbuilding Spotlight: The Cyborg Stasis Vaults

During the war, stasis vaults were built deep underground—reinforced chambers designed to preserve fully developed cyborg soldiers until deployment. These vaults were temperature-controlled, EMP-shielded, and self-powered, ensuring that even if Earth’s energy grid failed, the cyborg units inside would remain stable.

Most vaults contained:

  • 100 to 300 cyborg soldiers
  • Training data modules
  • Medical nanite reserves
  • Genetic mate-bond compatibility records
  • Emergency awakening protocols

Many cyborgs in your books—Raven, Steele, Bodee and Axel—come from these very vaults. Their lives didn’t begin in childhood like ordinary humans. Their first breath, their first heartbeat outside the chamber, and their first moment of free will all happened after the world they were made to defend had already collapsed.

These men were built for war…
…but destined for something else entirely.

Closing Thoughts for Part One

Cyborg romance found me long before I realized it. It lived in the stories I loved, the universes I created, and the emotions I carried from childhood. Now, writing these series is one of my deepest joys—and I’m thrilled to share the heart behind them in this 5-part blog journey.

Stay tuned for Part 2:
“A Personal History Written in Alloy and Memory.”