Könyv The First Cage YASMIN SOHAL

The First Cage

Good Girl: How Families Quietly Train Girls to Shrink

Szerző: YASMIN SOHAL
Nyelv: Angol
Kötés: Puha kötésű
Elérhetőség: Várható készletfeltöltés
Küldés 11. 07. 2026
3 953 Ft
What if the person you call "yourself" was never entirely yours?What if the personality you spent de...

Információk a könyvről

Szerző
Nyelv
Angol
Kötés
Könyv - Puha kötésű
Kiadva
2026
oldal
138
EAN
9798185673492
Enbook ID
53203557
Súly
339
Méretek
216 x 280 x 8

Teljes leírás

What if the person you call "yourself" was never entirely yours?

What if the personality you spent decades building was quietly shaped by thousands of invisible instructions you never chose?

Have you ever wondered why saying no feels guilty?

Why you apologize before speaking?

Why you put everyone else's needs before your own?

Why asking for more feels selfish?

Why you care for everyone except yourself?

What if these aren't personality traits?

What if they are training?

For generations, girls have been taught lessons so gently they often mistake them for love.

Be a good girl.

Sit properly.

Don't talk loudly.

Let him win.

Don't fight.

Be mature.

Think of others first.

What will people say?

No one says, "We are about to make you smaller."

Instead, they call it love.

They call it protection.

They call it culture.

And so begins a lifelong process of shrinking.

In The First Cage: Good Girl, Yasmin Sohal uncovers the invisible conditioning that quietly shapes millions of women long before they are old enough to question it.

This is not a book about blaming parents.

Most parents pass on what they themselves inherited.

This is not a book about attacking culture.

It is about examining it.

It is about seeing how confidence becomes caution, how curiosity becomes shame, how boundaries become selfishness, and how people-pleasing becomes personality.

It is about understanding why so many women arrive in adulthood feeling exhausted, guilty, disconnected from themselves, and strangely unsure of who they are beneath the roles they perform for everyone else.

As you turn these pages, you may find yourself revisiting your childhood.

Remembering conversations you forgot you remembered.

Recognizing rules you never questioned.

Seeing how often women are praised not for who they are, but for how little space they take.

And eventually, you will confront a question that changes everything:

How much of me is truly me?

And how much was created by a world that benefited from me being smaller?

But this is not a story of victimhood.

It is a story of awakening.

Because some women eventually notice the cage.

They begin questioning the guilt.

The fear.

The expectations.

The invisible rules that have governed their lives for years.

They begin asking:

Who would I be if I stopped apologizing for existing?

What dreams did I abandon to be accepted?

What parts of myself did I trade for approval?

What if goodness never required self-erasure?

Raw, honest, and deeply personal, The First Cage: Good Girl is for every woman who has ever felt guilty for wanting more, every daughter praised for shrinking, every mother questioning what she inherited, and every reader searching for the difference between who they truly are and who they were trained to become.

Because the greatest cage was never around her.

It was built inside her.

And freedom begins the moment she sees it.

Once you see it, you cannot unsee it.