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The Inherited Cage: The Akasha Humanism series, #1
Coles
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The Inherited Cage: The Akasha Humanism series, #1 in Brampton, ON
By None
Current price: $6.99

Coles
The Inherited Cage: The Akasha Humanism series, #1 in Brampton, ON
By None
Current price: $6.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information and pricing may vary - to confirm current pricing, availability, shipping, and return information please contact Coles. In the event of a pricing discrepancy, the retailer's price will apply.
What if the life you believe is yours… was written before you ever had a chance to choose it?
From the moment we are born, our identities begin forming through the expectations of family, culture, religion, and society. These influences shape how we think, what we believe, and even how we see ourselves. Most people spend their lives inside this inherited structure without ever realizing it exists.
The Inherited Cage explores the quiet architecture of identity and the invisible agreements we carry from childhood into adulthood. Through reflection, philosophy, and personal insight, Stephen James Freeman invites readers to examine the beliefs they were given—and consider what might lie beyond them.
This is not a book about rebellion or abandoning one's past. It is about awareness. When we begin to see the framework that shaped us, something remarkable happens: the door we thought was locked was never closed at all.
For readers drawn to the deeper questions of consciousness, identity, and personal freedom, The Inherited Cage offers a thoughtful exploration of how we come to know ourselves—and how we might begin again.
What if the life you believe is yours… was written before you ever had a chance to choose it?
From the moment we are born, our identities begin forming through the expectations of family, culture, religion, and society. These influences shape how we think, what we believe, and even how we see ourselves. Most people spend their lives inside this inherited structure without ever realizing it exists.
The Inherited Cage explores the quiet architecture of identity and the invisible agreements we carry from childhood into adulthood. Through reflection, philosophy, and personal insight, Stephen James Freeman invites readers to examine the beliefs they were given—and consider what might lie beyond them.
This is not a book about rebellion or abandoning one's past. It is about awareness. When we begin to see the framework that shaped us, something remarkable happens: the door we thought was locked was never closed at all.
For readers drawn to the deeper questions of consciousness, identity, and personal freedom, The Inherited Cage offers a thoughtful exploration of how we come to know ourselves—and how we might begin again.





















