Sterling Beaudin wasn't the cool kid, the athlete, or the troublemaker. He was "wallpaper with a pulse"-the quiet observer who learned early on that the safest place to be was on the edge of the room, blending in. He became an expert at reading the temperature of every situation, adjusting his mask, and becoming exactly who people needed him to be.
Read the Room, Kid is the hilarious and heartbreaking true story of a boy who built his life on being invisible, and the man who eventually had to burn it all down to be seen.
From the awkward trenches of prairie adolescence and the high-pressure hustle of corporate retail to the chaos of accidental entrepreneurship and the muddy reality of off-grid living, Sterling recounts a life spent chasing worthiness in all the wrong places. With self-deprecating wit and disarming vulnerability, he takes you through the messy, unpolished lessons of:
Unlearning the hustle: Why productivity is a terrible substitute for presence.
The art of masking: How to survive a room without losing your soul (and why it eventually stops working).
Dad mode: Trying to raise kids who don't have to hide, even when you're still figuring out how to show up yourself.
The quiet wins: Finding peace in a life that looks nothing like the one you thought you wanted.
This isn't a guru's guide to happiness. It's a field note from the trenches of being human. It's for anyone who has ever felt like they were falling behind, falling apart, or just falling forward.
If you've ever walked into a room and immediately scanned for the exit, this book is for you.