Identity: The Way In. The Way Out. is a quiet, first-person inquiry into selfhood, narrative, and the effort of maintaining a coherent sense of "I."
Written with deliberate restraint, the book unfolds as a sequence of short reflections that trace how identity forms, hardens, and quietly unravels under psychological pressure. Rather than offering explanation, theory, or solutions, it stays close to lived experience, observing how language, memory, and self-description shape what feels stable and what begins to loosen.
The narrative does not seek to resolve questions of identity or transform uncertainty into insight. It does not validate conclusions drawn during periods of psychological distress. Instead, it examines how attention, naming, and interpretation interact in moments of vulnerability, and how certainty itself can become destabilising.
This revised edition expands and reorganises the work into a continuous narrative arc, accompanied by minimal symbolic imagery. The emphasis is on observation rather than explanation, allowing readers to recognise familiar patterns of inner experience without being told what to believe or how to recover.
This book is not a medical guide and does not replace professional care. It is written for readers who want careful, honest language for what questions of identity can feel like from the inside, and who value clarity, restraint, and precision over advice or reassurance.
About the Author :
Simon Robinson is a writer and former physician whose work explores identity, perception, and the limits of psychological language. Drawing on lived experience and long-form reflection, his writing describes inner experience without instruction, diagnosis, or prescription. He lives and works in North Yorkshire, UK.