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INTROSPECT

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INTROSPECT is an ebook by @visakanv about becoming who you are. It's a modern remix of riffs from Nietzsche, Emerson, Alan Watts, Joseph Campbell, Carl Jung, and others. It's about hitting "inspect element" on your inherited narratives, troubleshooting them, and experimenting with them to suit you better. It's about cultivating a tinkering mindset, and tinkering with your mindset. Dismantle your inner authoritarian. Transform your inner life from prison to playground, from ordeal to adventure. Become friends with yourself. Earn your own self-respect and admiration.



Praise for INTROSPECT:

“…this book has sutured a number of my mental/psychological wounds.” – @bejapewa

“Particularly i wanted to comment on how incredibly effective I found (Introspect’s) style which disarmed me BAM, i’ve never read a book that felt so much like a human living project, somehow i felt like i was writing it myself with all the tangents and brilliant flashes and cliches and circles and meta commentary of real life thinking.” – Nicole M

“(Introspect) is probably the self-help book with the most humility I’ve read – the way it breaks the fourth wall is well-done. The mythic framing of the journey into the self is beautiful.” – Marie

“The book has a million things good about it, plenty of practical advice tailored towards understanding yourself, building approaches to managing your psychology, and confronting your deepest fears — and astonishingly, it delivers on its immensely ambitious metaphorical arc.” – @annihalated

"I think its safe to say that this book has gently and casually shattered my self-concept." – @russlramos

319 pages, ebook

Published February 1, 2022

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About the author

Visakan Veerasamy

2 books166 followers

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5 stars
28 (54%)
4 stars
16 (31%)
3 stars
7 (13%)
2 stars
0 (0%)
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0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews
Profile Image for Visakan.
Author 2 books166 followers
February 3, 2022
Pretty good but can be better. The intro is long-winded. The suggestions are repetitive and belabored. It takes a little too long to get to the meat of the matter, and there it gets convoluted. Lots of good quotes in there though. Overall framework is also quite sticky and memorable.
Profile Image for Jinan.
144 reviews38 followers
April 17, 2022
This is the book I wish I could have read when I was twenty. Or hell fifteen.

A straight 6/5 no cap.

I actually got into journaling whilst going through this book, and noting things down! Something Id honestly usually lowkey dread, for some reason. Organizing implies precision I suppose, and that brings out perfectionism, which implies extreme effort and stress.

Anyway... focusing back to the book! Visa has once again proved himself to be the most relateable internet guru of this era. No really, there is no writing like this, anywhere. I mean, really, it truly is refreshing to listen to someone who actually lives and understands our current contexts, internet cultures, and new age social dynamics (rather than an outsider observing in, this feels like the real deal!)

The it is written w such a strange and almost haphazard structure made it actually made it all the more an enjoyable experience for me.
Profile Image for Collin Lysford.
59 reviews10 followers
February 15, 2022
Probably the most incomplete book I will ever give five stars to. It's essentially just the repetition of a bunch of different mantras that modern reality frames the Great Big Question of Meaning in an unhelpful way, and that you just need to internalize that to see the way to live in a way that makes you happy. This means that it's laden with recaps, endless restatements, metacommentary, quotes that don't add much for the length - stuff like that. But his point is that any idiot can live meaningfully and if he didn't look like an idiot the whole time it wouldn't work.

So don't come at it through a context of review; it's an unhelpful frame here. The book isn't complete or even all that well put together, but a obsession with coherence is the problem and of course the antidote looks different. Also if you find it's dragging on - and I did! - you can literally just read faster lmao
Profile Image for Marie.
34 reviews13 followers
February 7, 2022
Visakan's second book! It was hard to put down, and I took a few pages of notes along the way. This is probably the self-help book with the most humility I've written—the way it breaks the fourth wall is well-done. The mythic framing of the journey into the self is beautiful. There are rough patches, places where an idea isn't quite finished or a sentence that drops off, and it does go on to overly repeat itself in a few places. I enjoyed reading it. It asks good questions that will keep me busy when I'm journalling over the next while.

This book will help a lot of people.
Profile Image for Wesley Ellis.
29 reviews3 followers
May 22, 2022
I don't know if I can recommend this book. It has lots of good advice, and moments that really resonated with me, but other bits felt really thin and platitude like
2 reviews
April 10, 2022
Take this review with a grain of salt, as I'm an avid fan of Visa's twitter and was waiting for this book to come out for months. As a recovering self-help addict, I tend to be skeptical of this genre, but Visa truly made something special here. This book manages to be both comforting and discomforting, while avoiding the major pitfalls most self-help books fall into - condescending tone, vague and unactionable advice, unreplicated research, and worst of all, pages and pages of fluff. Instead, this book serves as both a compassionate letter to his younger self, and a sort of troubleshooting guide to most people's internal problems.

The 300 pages in this book contain very little fluff and quite a lot of actionable information, some of which I started implementing in my life before I finished reading. Some of the most powerful for me have been "do 100 thing", "focus on what you want to see more of", "show up, don't die, don't quit", and "joke about the outcomes you want", but there are so many more useful methods and ways to frame situations.

As someone with many ADHD-like traits who has often felt lost and indecisive in life, I resonated heavily with most of the content in this book. But anyone looking to understand themselves a bit better (introspect, if you will) can find something useful for themselves. I recommend reading this book once straight through, and then using it as a reference as needed. I've personally been looking back on it from time to time, and plan to give it a deeper reread since I felt like there was too much good information to soak it all in properly the first time.

Obviously the book isn't perfect, and has some sections that are vague and harder to implement, and others that are explicitly incomplete. All this means is that us readers have more to look forward to when the next version of an already great book comes out.
Profile Image for Benno Krojer.
60 reviews8 followers
March 3, 2023
Some really good concrete things to try. Lots of references to things I've heard of and now know heard of in more nuance.
Chaotic by nature which was expected, meant this way but also hard to follow at times. Like that the chapter titles and content didn't fully match.
Profile Image for Alex H.
10 reviews
September 21, 2023
I enjoyed Introspect a lot. I liked the quest framing, the cheerfulness, the scrapbooking of quotes and journal entries. I liked the author's ongoing dialogue about what he's really trying to say, and the inventive suggestions for self-humanisation. But mostly I liked that it modelled its ethos: 'embrace-mistakes' .

We get the author's own life difficulties recounted, notes of uncertainty, expressions of dissatisfaction with what's been written yet determination to ship regardless. These features and the encouraging of readers to take or leave what they will ("I'm just some guy") help keep the author in the role of a helpful mentor rather than as an infallible guru.

I'm sure the book's improvable but, then again, that does seem to be the author's point! I didn't mind any meanderings and found it a strength that key points were repeated in slightly-different ways ( I knew I could always skim).

Some of Introspect's ideas were familiar to me from Visa's Twitter but others were new, and I appreciate having them all conveniently curated together. There's a lot of useful insights here and it'll be a reference book for me. Strongly recommended!
115 reviews
April 23, 2024
There are some great ideas in here, but ultimately the text is so long that it paradoxically encourages inaction, and it feels like this is more about the author's introspection than the reader's.
3 reviews
February 28, 2023
Loved how this was not a typical self help book. It genuinely felt like someone was talking to me and advising me through life. Would definitely return to this book at different points in my life
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews

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