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The Man Who Observed Himself
Coles
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The Man Who Observed Himself in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $4.99

Coles
The Man Who Observed Himself in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $4.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
The Man That Observed Himself is not a book about answers.
It is a book about attention.
Written by someone who learned to observe long before he learned to explain, this work explores how a human being is shaped by silence, work, fear, resilience, and quiet understanding. It is a reflection born not from theory alone, but from lived experience — from construction sites, from migration, from responsibility taken too early, and from a life spent watching people more than judging them.
This book does not follow a traditional narrative. Instead, it unfolds as a series of observations: moments, thoughts, and realizations that reveal how identity is slowly constructed through experience rather than instruction.
At its core, this is a book about:
observing before reacting
understanding before judging
recognising what people hide, not just what they show
and learning how inner structures are built long before external ones
The Man That Observed Himself speaks to readers who have lived, worked, endured, and reflected — especially those who feel that the most important lessons in life are never taught, only discovered.
This is not a manual.
It is not a confession.
It is an act of observation.
And an invitation for the reader to do the same.
The Man That Observed Himself is not a book about answers.
It is a book about attention.
Written by someone who learned to observe long before he learned to explain, this work explores how a human being is shaped by silence, work, fear, resilience, and quiet understanding. It is a reflection born not from theory alone, but from lived experience — from construction sites, from migration, from responsibility taken too early, and from a life spent watching people more than judging them.
This book does not follow a traditional narrative. Instead, it unfolds as a series of observations: moments, thoughts, and realizations that reveal how identity is slowly constructed through experience rather than instruction.
At its core, this is a book about:
observing before reacting
understanding before judging
recognising what people hide, not just what they show
and learning how inner structures are built long before external ones
The Man That Observed Himself speaks to readers who have lived, worked, endured, and reflected — especially those who feel that the most important lessons in life are never taught, only discovered.
This is not a manual.
It is not a confession.
It is an act of observation.
And an invitation for the reader to do the same.


















