“They don’t even know why they’re mad. It starts before the alarm. Grinding teeth. Clenched fists. Racing thoughts like traffic lights blinking red. The second their eyes open, they’re already behind, already annoyed, already blaming somebody for something they haven’t even faced yet. They slam coffee. They yell at the kids. They curse the traffic. They flip the bird to a stranger like it’s a reflex. And if you ask them why? They’ll tell you: “It’s just a rough morning.” But that morning becomes every morning. That driver becomes every driver. That frustration becomes a personality. We live in a world where patience is weakness, kindness is rare, and everyone else is the problem. We honk before we think, scroll before we feel, react before we reflect. And we wonder why we feel alone in a crowd. I’ve seen this anger. I’ve felt it. I’ve been on both ends of it. And I’m tired of pretending this is normal. This book isn’t about pointing fingers—it’s about holding up a mirror. It’s about waking up before the rage does. It’s about reclaiming the peace we’ve traded for speed, convenience, and ego. If you’ve ever felt the world is spinning[…]”
“They don’t even know why they’re mad. It starts before the alarm. Grinding teeth. Clenched fists. Racing thoughts like traffic lights blinking red. The second their eyes open, they’re already behind, already annoyed, already blaming somebody for something they haven’t even faced yet. They slam coffee. They yell at the kids. They curse the traffic. They flip the bird to a stranger like it’s a reflex. And if you ask them why? They’ll tell you: “It’s just a rough morning.” But that morning becomes every morning. That driver becomes every driver. That frustration becomes a personality. We live in a world where patience is weakness, kindness is rare, and everyone else is the problem. We honk before we think, scroll before we feel, react before we reflect. And we wonder why we feel alone in a crowd. I’ve seen this anger. I’ve felt it. I’ve been on both ends of it. And I’m tired of pretending this is normal. This book isn’t about pointing fingers—it’s about holding up a mirror. It’s about waking up before the rage does. It’s about reclaiming the peace we’ve traded for speed, convenience, and ego. If you’ve ever felt the world is spinning[…]”