Description
This is a book about people who did everything “right” and still got life wrong. Those who collected diplomas, titles, and accolades, yet somehow managed to sabotage their relationships, their integrity, and often their own peace of mind. It is a book for those who woke up one day and realized that all their education had not taught them how to be honest with themselves, kind to others, or wise in the moments that mattered most.
“Educated fools” are not stupid; they are often highly intelligent, disciplined, and accomplished. The problem is not the education but the imbalance: knowledge raced ahead while character, humility, and emotional maturity lagged behind. This gap can leave a person fluent in theory but clumsy in love, skilled at debate but poor at listening, impressive in public but hollow in private.
If you see yourself on these pages, this is not a verdict; it is an invitation. The chapters ahead do not aim to shame you for what you have been, but to guide you into who you can become. They will ask hard questions, offer practical practices, and challenge cherished self-images—but always with the belief that you are capable of deep change.
Recovery, in this context, is not about discarding your education; it is about redeeming it. It means integrating head, heart, and hands so that what you know serves how you live and how you love. It means moving from needing to be the smartest person in the room to being the most present, honest, and teachable.
If you are willing to let your success story be interrupted, re-examined, and rewritten, turn the page. The journey from educated fool to wise human is costly, but it is also deeply freeing—and it begins with the courage to admit that, despite everything you have learned, there is still so much you do not yet know.








Reviews
There are no reviews yet.