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This title is printed to order. This book may have been self-published. If so, we cannot guarantee the quality of the content. In the main most books will have gone through the editing process however some may not. We therefore suggest that you be aware of this before ordering this book. If in doubt check either the author or publisher’s details as we are unable to accept any returns unless they are faulty. Please contact us if you have any questions.
He once built a career on reading people under pressure.
Now he sits across from them in their most vulnerable moments.
Shared Humanity is not a memoir of law enforcement. It is a collection of patient stories - each chapter centered on a single individual who walked into a therapy office carrying something heavy: trauma, shame, anger, confusion, fear.
Each chapter stands alone. Each patient presents a different psychological landscape. And in every encounter, the former federal investigator must draw on the same sharpened instincts that once helped him assess danger - now repurposed to understand suffering.
There are no easy cases.
A man whose anger masks something deeper.
A client whose story shifts depending on what feels safest to reveal.
A patient stuck between guilt and grief.
A mind shaped by trauma but resistant to being defined by it.
The therapy room becomes a place of subtle tension. What is defense? What is truth? What is protection? What is pain?
Through these character-driven chapters, the book reveals how people construct identities to survive their experiences - and how carefully those identities must be unpacked. The author navigates complex emotional terrain without spectacle, exposing the fragile mechanics of trust, resistance, projection, and breakthrough.
This is not therapy as it appears in pop culture. It is slower. Quieter. More layered.
The skills that once analyzed inconsistencies now search for meaning. The ability to detect what isn't being said becomes a tool not for confrontation, but for connection.
At its core, Shared Humanity asks a simple but unsettling question:
What if the same instincts used to detect deception are the ones required to understand pain?
Across each patient story, one truth becomes clear: beneath coping strategies, diagnoses, and defenses, there is a shared emotional architecture that binds us all.
We are more transparent than we realize.
And more connected than we admit.
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This title is printed to order. This book may have been self-published. If so, we cannot guarantee the quality of the content. In the main most books will have gone through the editing process however some may not. We therefore suggest that you be aware of this before ordering this book. If in doubt check either the author or publisher’s details as we are unable to accept any returns unless they are faulty. Please contact us if you have any questions.
He once built a career on reading people under pressure.
Now he sits across from them in their most vulnerable moments.
Shared Humanity is not a memoir of law enforcement. It is a collection of patient stories - each chapter centered on a single individual who walked into a therapy office carrying something heavy: trauma, shame, anger, confusion, fear.
Each chapter stands alone. Each patient presents a different psychological landscape. And in every encounter, the former federal investigator must draw on the same sharpened instincts that once helped him assess danger - now repurposed to understand suffering.
There are no easy cases.
A man whose anger masks something deeper.
A client whose story shifts depending on what feels safest to reveal.
A patient stuck between guilt and grief.
A mind shaped by trauma but resistant to being defined by it.
The therapy room becomes a place of subtle tension. What is defense? What is truth? What is protection? What is pain?
Through these character-driven chapters, the book reveals how people construct identities to survive their experiences - and how carefully those identities must be unpacked. The author navigates complex emotional terrain without spectacle, exposing the fragile mechanics of trust, resistance, projection, and breakthrough.
This is not therapy as it appears in pop culture. It is slower. Quieter. More layered.
The skills that once analyzed inconsistencies now search for meaning. The ability to detect what isn't being said becomes a tool not for confrontation, but for connection.
At its core, Shared Humanity asks a simple but unsettling question:
What if the same instincts used to detect deception are the ones required to understand pain?
Across each patient story, one truth becomes clear: beneath coping strategies, diagnoses, and defenses, there is a shared emotional architecture that binds us all.
We are more transparent than we realize.
And more connected than we admit.