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| "Sometimes the broken parts are where the growth begins." — A glimpse into Fixing What Life Breaks by MRY Amjad |
Something's moving quietly beneath the surface. Strong. Persistent.
It stays in your chest long after you first hear about it, like a whisper and thunder at the same time.
That something is a book.
"Fixing What Life Breaks" by MRY Amjad.
And it's almost ready to meet you.
This isn't the kind of book that shouts instructions or promises overnight transformation. It sits with you. Like a friend who doesn't try to fix your problems but listens while you unravel them. It doesn't throw jargon around or pretend life is easy.
Instead, it offers a soft voice that says: "Hey, I get it. You can start again."
About the Hard Truths
Sometimes life takes things away without apology. One day, you're whole planning, smiling, moving forward. Then something shifts. You lose a dream, a person, maybe even the version of yourself that once felt okay.
That's when everything feels cracked inside.
This book is about those cracks. Not about achieving perfection, but about learning to hold your broken pieces gently instead of throwing them away.
About the Author
MRY Amjad doesn't hide behind big words or false wisdom. She writes from a place that's been through pain, maybe pain like yours. There's no pretending in her tone. It's real, raw, and deeply human.
She writes about falling apart, about silent tears and heavy nights. But she also shows you something else: light. The kind that returns gradually when you stop forcing it.
What Makes This Book Different
Every page feels warm, like sunlight through broken blinds. Some words sting. Some heal. But all of them feel true.
When you read it, you feel like someone's whispering, "You're not alone."
The book doesn't rush you. It's not about moving on fast. It's about learning to breathe again slowly, simply. Picking up pieces even when your hands shake. The kind of slow healing that hurts but helps.
What You'll Find Inside
- On forgiveness: How to forgive yourself when that feels impossible
- On courage: Not the loud kind, but the quiet bravery that gets up on bad days
- On starting over: Why endings don't always mean over—sometimes they mean differently
"Fixing What Life Breaks" isn't about repair like glue. It's about repair-like growth—like when a broken branch still blooms in spring.
It's not trying to be perfect. It's trying to be real.
And maybe that's what we all need right now.
