Reading paths connected to your state, goals, and current intention.
Start here
A reading layer designed to help you choose the next book with intention, not overload.
Disclosure: we may earn a commission if you buy through this link.
Browse by intent
Collections
Current state: Discipline
Rami Kaminski
Psychiatrist Rami Kaminski explores how feeling like an outsider, while painful, can become a profound advantage by fostering creativity, resilience, and the courage to forge your own authentic path.
This book matters because it reframes the outsider experience as a gift rather than a curse, showing how not belonging can fuel exceptional achievements and authentic living.
It is for anyone who has felt like they don't fit in and wants to transform that experience into a source of strength, creativity, and unique contribution.
The core idea is that outsiders thrive precisely because they aren't constrained by group norms, allowing them to think independently and create innovations that conformists cannot imagine.
Disclosure: we may earn a commission if you buy through this link.
Mel Robbins, Sawyer Robbins
The #1 New York Times bestseller with over 7 million copies sold. Mel Robbins introduces a transformative two-word tool that helps readers stop giving others the power to control their happiness, success, and choices.
This book matters because it gives readers a simple mindset shift to reclaim personal power and stop wasting energy on what others think or do.
It is for anyone who feels stuck, overwhelmed, or frustrated by other people's behavior and wants to take back control of their life.
The core idea is that letting others do as they choose while focusing on your own actions and responses is the key to personal freedom and success.

Sonya Renee Taylor
Activist Sonya Renee Taylor offers a radical framework for understanding how systems of oppression live in our bodies and provides tools for practicing radical self-love as an act of personal and political transformation.
This book matters because it connects body shame to systemic oppression and shows how reclaiming our bodies is essential for both personal healing and social justice.
It is for anyone struggling with body image, self-worth, or internalized oppression who wants to break free and practice radical self-acceptance.
The core idea is that we cannot dismantle oppressive systems without first making peace with our own bodies through radical self-love and acceptance.
Disclosure: we may earn a commission if you buy through this link.
Disclosure: we may earn a commission if you buy through this link.