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My Dark Haven: Dark home. Quiet mind. And no monsters here.. The Art of Living
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8233630262
- EAN9798233630262
- Date de parution20/01/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurLinda Balsamo
Résumé
You don't need a brighter life. You may need a quieter one. We live under constant illumination-literal and social. Everything is visible, measurable, commentable. Even at home, many of us remain "on, " managing surfaces and impressions, bracing for the next demand. In The Dark Haven, Arthur Tiger tells the story of his black home-not as a style choice, but as a practical form of self-care. With lyrical clarity and psychological insight, he explores what darkness can offer when it is chosen with care: less glare, less performance, deeper rest, truer words.
Inside this book you'll find: Why brightness can feel like pressure-and why dimness can feel like permission Night and sleep as the body's built-in mercy and reset The movie theater as a model of immersion: why we need the lights to go down The darkroom as a metaphor for inner development: what needs time before it can be named A closed room for conversation: how privacy protects honesty between people The childhood tent: our earliest instinct for boundaries and shelter Why darkness is not for everyone-and why restoration is the real goal This is not a manifesto against light.
It's an invitation to reclaim balance: daylight and shade, clarity and privacy, action and rest. If you've ever felt tired of being "fine, "if you've ever wanted a place where nothing demands you, The Dark Haven offers a simple, humane practice:Lower the lights. Let your eyes adjust. Come home.
Inside this book you'll find: Why brightness can feel like pressure-and why dimness can feel like permission Night and sleep as the body's built-in mercy and reset The movie theater as a model of immersion: why we need the lights to go down The darkroom as a metaphor for inner development: what needs time before it can be named A closed room for conversation: how privacy protects honesty between people The childhood tent: our earliest instinct for boundaries and shelter Why darkness is not for everyone-and why restoration is the real goal This is not a manifesto against light.
It's an invitation to reclaim balance: daylight and shade, clarity and privacy, action and rest. If you've ever felt tired of being "fine, "if you've ever wanted a place where nothing demands you, The Dark Haven offers a simple, humane practice:Lower the lights. Let your eyes adjust. Come home.






















