Some people do not stay stuck because they are confused.
They stay stuck because some part of them still does not experience their own clarity as sufficient permission to move.
They know what they think.
They know what they want.
They know the email should be sent, the decision should be made, the project should begin.
And still they wait.
Not always because of fear.
Not always because of low confidence.
Not even because they need more information.
They wait because action still feels psychologically conditional on reassurance, approval, invitation, or some sign that it is finally allowed.
The Permission Habit is a sharp, psychologically exact book about that hidden delay.
Marek Halt explores why so many capable people become dependent on external confirmation before movement feels legitimate, how that pattern forms, how it reshapes work, ambition, identity, speech, and intimacy, and what it takes to begin acting on your own authority without waiting to be chosen first.
This is not a generic confidence book.
It is a serious book about why self-awareness often fails to become self-authorization.
If you have ever known exactly what to do and still found yourself waiting, this book will give language to a pattern you may have been living inside for years.