What if the self you have been defending is not a core - but a reflex?
In Unbecoming, Gregory K. Cadotte offers a quiet and direct examination of how identity forms, how it sustains itself through subtle interference, and how it naturally softens when that interference stops.
Rather than presenting enlightenment as a dramatic event or mystical achievement, this book explores something far more ordinary - the moment before becoming. The subtle instant when experience arises and the mind reaches to claim it as "me."
Through clear reflection and lived observation, Unbecoming explores:
The layered survival surface mistaken for identityHow intersecting conditionings create the illusion of a centerThe second reaction that sustains sufferingWhy non-interference allows experience to complete itselfDrawing from contemplative insight without relying on religious doctrine, this work invites readers to look closely at the mechanics of self-creation. What feels solid begins to reveal itself as a structure of accumulated reactions. What feels personal begins to soften into process.
This is not a book about self-improvement.
It is not a promise of transcendence.
It is an invitation to stop constructing what does not need to be constructed.
Underneath the effort to become someone lies a peace that was never absent - only obscured by reinforcement.
Unbecoming is for readers drawn to contemplative philosophy, psychological clarity, and the possibility that freedom may be simpler than we imagined.
Related Subjects
Philosophy Religion Religion & Spirituality Self Help Self-Help Self-Help & Psychology