You arrived screaming.No résumé. No filters. No apology.Just wet lungs and the absolute refusal to be invisible.A circle of humans leaned in, eyes soft, palms open, whispering the oldest sentence our species ever spoke:I see you. You are here. You belong.
Then the world taught you to edit that cry.By two, you learned that joy could be "too loud."By five, that tears made you "dramatic."By twelve, that your real voice was safer behind a screen.By thirty, you barely recognized the sound of your own unmasked breath.
This book is the search for what was never actually lost.It is the quiet, ferocious work of remembering that the infant who once demanded to be witnessed is still alive inside your ribcage, waiting for you to stop performing long enough to hear her heartbeat.
You will walk with Lars, the CEO who sobbed in a Norwegian therapy room because someone finally saw the boy beneath the stock price.You will sit with Rivka, who forgot her own name when the Sabbath candles stopped burning with Miriam.You will stand under acacia trees with the Hadza and remember that belonging was never something you had to earn.
This is not a book about becoming worthy.It is a book about remembering you already are.
Close your eyes.Place a hand on your chest.Feel that unsteady, imperfect rise and fall.That is the first cry, still speaking.Listen.
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