Książka Rejected Skye Alden

Rejected

Break Free from Rejection, Heal Trauma, and Rewire Your Brain for Belonging

Autor: Skye Alden
Język: Angielski
Oprawa: Miękka
Wydawca: 22 Lions
Dostępność: Dostępna u dostawcy
Wysyłamy za 9-15 dni
74.07
Most of us never forget the moment when the world turns away. It's the silence that lingers too long...

Informacje o książce

Autor
Język
Angielski
Oprawa
Książka - Miękka
Data wydania
2026
strony
102
EAN
9798240956225
Enbook ID
52865538
Wydawca
Waga
149
Wymiary
152 x 229 x 5

Pełny opis

Most of us never forget the moment when the world turns away. It's the silence that lingers too long after we speak. It's a door closing just as our hand reaches for the doorknob. It's laughter erupting in a crowded hallway at our expense. In that heartbeat, our sense of belonging shatters, and we realize it was never guaranteed. Neuroscience confirms what our bodies already know: Social rejection activates the same brain regions as physical pain. A harsh word feels like a blow because, for our ancestors, exclusion meant death. This ancient alarm still resonates within us today. When rejection becomes chronic, whether through childhood neglect, systemic marginalization, or repeated dismissal, it never fully subsides. It hums beneath every interaction, leaving us with a sense of impending loss etched into our posture, breath, and nervous system.

We may have learned to shrink, quiet our voice, and hide in plain sight to avoid further hurt. Although we've been told that it's not what happens to you, but how you react, for those wounded early on, that reaction was established before the ability to choose existed. The result? A perpetually braced body, a hypervigilant mind, and a life shadowed by shame and isolation. However, your brain is not your destiny-it's your history. Those threat pathways can soften and reroute. With science-backed tools, such as somatic practices that signal safety to our nervous system, self-compassion that lowers cortisol and rebuilds trust, and deliberate visibility that reclaims power, healing is possible.

In this book, we explore the anatomy of this wound and the path beyond it. You'll learn why rejection reshapes the brain and how outcasts such as Emily Dickinson, Vincent van Gogh, and Ida B. Wells transformed exclusion into profound insight and creation. You'll also discover practical steps to rewire your brain for belonging through breathwork, movement, narrative reframing, and courageous small acts of being seen. The world may have tried to erase you, but you learned that your worth was never dependent on approval. What remains is a resilient self, tested by fire and poised to expand.

You don't need to conform to a frame that never fit. Stop apologizing for your unique contours. This book invites you to break free, heal the trauma, and rewire your brain for genuine, unapologetic belonging. You are no longer defined by rejection. You are defined by what you build from it.