You thought you were anxious.
You thought you were overthinking.
You thought you just cared too much.
But what if you were simply prepared?
Prepared for distance.
Prepared for silence.
Prepared for something to shift.
In Peace Feels Unfamiliar, M. Williams explores the quiet patterns that shape how we attach - the bracing, the replaying, the over-adjusting, the constant anticipation of loss. With steady insight and reflective prose, she examines how fear can masquerade as responsibility, and how vigilance can become identity.
This is not a book about eliminating fear.
It is about recognizing where fear quietly took the wheel.
It is about understanding what your body remembers.
About interrupting reflexes that once protected you.
About learning that calm is not a warning sign.
If you have ever loved with one eye open...
If you have ever confused exhaustion with devotion...
If peace has ever felt suspicious instead of safe...
This book is for you.
Not to change who you are.
But to help you rest inside who you've become.
Steady is not boring.
Soft is not weak.
And peace is not something you earn.
It is something you allow.