In a world defined by speed and the cult of optimization, leadership has become a performance - and exhaustion is its hidden cost.
The Great Remembering is a call to reclaim an intelligence that cannot be downloaded, scaled, or simulated. One that is sensed and lived, not calculated.
Through the lens of a mythic parable - a civilization shattered by its own disconnection - this book reveals the invisible architecture of modern burnout: the severance between strategy and sensing, control and coherence. It names Conditioned Intelligence - the survival reflex we have polished into titles, accolades, and a resume - and offers the map back to Living Intelligence: the authority that leads through resonance, not control.
For the leader quietly exhausted by the performance of themselves - this is the moment of remembering. Not to an idea of you. To who you have always been beneath the noise.