Rabbit is an intimate nonfiction memoir that explores the invisible architecture of identity, trauma, religion, addiction, sexuality, family systems, and personal awakening. Written in a reflective and literary style, the book follows the author's journey from childhood through adulthood, revealing how environments, institutions, expectations, and survival mechanisms shape the human mind and body.
Through memories of growing up in a strict religious environment, navigating performance and conformity, experiencing addiction culture, relationships, family tension, corporate structures, and emotional isolation, the author slowly uncovers the difference between survival and authentic living. The narrative examines how fear, silence, shame, approval, and social conditioning influence identity - and how reclaiming choice becomes the foundation for healing.
Rather than presenting life as a dramatic rebellion, Rabbit presents transformation as a gradual awakening: a quiet movement from reactive living toward conscious alignment. Honest, vulnerable, and psychologically observant, the book speaks to readers interested in memoirs about healing, self-awareness, spirituality, trauma recovery, addiction, identity, and personal truth.