What happens when the drive to create, achieve, and discover is forever interrupted by a restless and distracted mind? If you've ever been haunted by the question, "Why can't I just finish what I start?", this book is for you.
In Rooting, Sisyphus Lynn traces a deeply personal and sharply observed journey through ambition, burnout, trauma, and a midlife ADHD diagnosis. Structured like a mosaic of unfinished paths, this short memoir explores what it means to begin again and again without ever arriving at the tidy conclusions the world demands. Once a tenure-track professor, Lynn walked away from academia after years of quiet exhaustion. The book opens at that decisive moment and unfolds through six interlinked chapters, spanning a childhood fractured by early separation from her parents to adult quests for meaning across academia, entrepreneurship, and international life. Through a dual-self perspective, she revisits her many unfinished paths, constructing new meaning from her lived experiences. With unflinching honesty and poetic clarity, Rooting offers reflection and resonance for anyone who has struggled with attention deficit, identity conflicts, or the weight of social expectations. At once philosophical and deeply personal, this is a story about surviving complexity, reclaiming one's voice, and learning to sit with what remains unfinished. It invites anyone who has felt trapped between ambition and exhaustion, yearning and fear, to witness what it means to strive without arriving-and to find joy and meaning in the striving itself.