ISBN-13: 9783565237760 / Angielski / Miękka / 152 str.
Most of us spend years trying to "find ourselves," believing identity is something we uncover once and carry forward. But what if the question "Who am I?" is less about discovery and more about permission-to shift, to contradict yesterday's version, to remain unfinished?This book examines the quiet tension between who we've been told we are and who we're still becoming. It explores the discomfort of not having a clear identity, the anxiety of feeling like we "should" know ourselves by now, and the cultural pressure to present a coherent, stable self to the world.Through psychological insight and compassionate reframing, it invites readers to reconsider identity not as something to nail down, but as something continuously unfolding. It looks at the roles we've inherited, the stories we've internalized, and the ways we edit ourselves to fit expectations-from family, career, relationships, or our own harsh inner standards.Rather than offering steps to "discover your true self," it opens space to explore what happens when we stop trying so hard to be someone definable. It examines the relief and fear of uncertainty, the pressure to be consistent, and the possibility that being "unfinished" isn't a problem to solve-it's the most honest version of being human.For anyone who feels lost, too fluid, or like they're performing a self they're not sure they believe in anymore.
You don't need to know who you are to begin living as if you matter. Identity isn't a destination-it's the ongoing process of showing up without needing to explain yourself first.