Unworthiness is not your truth. It is a frequency, a low, sticky signal you picked up somewhere along the way. From someone who didn't see you. From a version of yourself that learned to shrink. From a story you were handed and decided to keep. This workbook is the interruption. It works across three pillars, which I have used with clients from every walk of life, people who had nothing and people who had everything, and all of them carrying the same quiet wound: I am not enough.
This is a dismantling. A rewiring. A reclamation. You will be asked to go where it is uncomfortable. That discomfort is the signal — it means you are finally touching the real thing.
Unworthiness is not your truth. It is a frequency, a low, sticky signal you picked up somewhere along the way. From someone who didn't see you. From a version of yourself that learned to shrink. From a story you were handed and decided to keep. This workbook is the interruption. It works across three pillars, which I have used with clients from every walk of life, people who had nothing and people who had everything, and all of them carrying the same quiet wound: I am not enough.
This is a dismantling. A rewiring. A reclamation. You will be asked to go where it is uncomfortable. That discomfort is the signal — it means you are finally touching the real thing.