Through its hypnotic cadence and fragmented revelations, the book navigates the liminal spaces of memory, identity, and the uneasy intersection of the corporeal and the cosmic. At times prophetic, at times disturbingly intimate, each piece unspools like a fevered monologue from a mind untethered—grappling with the absurdity of existence, the horrors of perception, and the ecstatic agony of knowing too much and nothing at all.
Reading this collection is not a passive act; it is a challenge, an initiation. This is poetry in its purest form—unapologetic, untamed, and deeply, unnervingly human.
G. Scott Graham is an existential handyman — fixing what’s broken, realigning what’s off-kilter, and helping people rebuild their lives with meaning, purpose, and the occasional strip of duct tape. He’s also an author, career coach, business coach, and psychedelic support coach based in Boston, Massachusetts.
Scott is driven to help clients follow their “true azimuth” — a direction distinct from “true north.” It’s not about chasing some universal ideal. It’s about identifying what genuinely matters to you. It’s about recognizing the forces that pull your life off course and learning how to adjust so you still arrive where your heart wants to go. When you're 90 and looking back, your life should feel like it was truly yours — filled with pride, purpose, and meaning. No regrets.
When he’s not coaching people to be their very best, Scott runs a nonprofit farm animal rescue and lives what he teaches. He does Tough Mudders, teaches Sun 73 Tai Chi, paddleboards with his dogs Groot and Rocket, and camps in State Parks across New England whenever he can. His daily spiritual practice is grounded in anāpānasati, vipassanā, and mettā-bhāvanā meditation. A firm believer in service as the heart of a life well-lived, Scott also volunteers as an EMT instructor, firefighter, and Master Gardener in his community.
In his "free time," he writes books.