ISBN-13: 9783565231164 / Angielski / Miękka / 212 str.
Not knowing who you are anymore isn't confusion-it's the natural disorientation that comes when an old version of yourself no longer fits but a new one hasn't yet emerged. This book explores the psychological patterns of identity reconstruction: the grief of losing familiar ways of being, the anxiety of existing without clear self-definition, and the pressure to quickly become someone recognizable again. It examines why identity crises feel so destabilizing, how clinging to outdated self-concepts actually prevents growth, and what the discomfort of not-knowing reveals about the stories you've been living inside. Through compassionate psychological insight, it reframes identity not as something fixed to reclaim but as something fluid to inhabit with curiosity. It offers perspective on the difference between authentic self-discovery and performing a new persona, the hidden function of identity uncertainty, and the quiet integration that happens when you stop rushing to define yourself and start allowing emergence. This isn't about finding yourself faster-it's about trusting the unsettling space where transformation actually lives.
The uncomfortable truth about transformation is that there's always a period where you're nobody-not who you were.