EBOOK

About
Why do many devoted people never feel settled in their faith?They pray sincerely.They read carefully.They watch their thoughts.They correct their motives.Yet peace fades quickly, and closeness feels fragile.The Spirit We Thought We Knew explores a quiet possibility: the struggle was not a lack of devotion, but a misunderstanding of inner experience.Instead of teaching doctrine or offering techniques, the book walks through familiar situations - repeated prayers, searching for signs, interpreting feelings, fearing distance, and starting over again tomorrow. Gradually a pattern becomes visible. Ordinary mental activity was being read as spiritual information.A passing feeling became a message.Silence became absence.A thought became a warning.And reassurance became necessary again and again.Over time, faith slowly turned into supervision.The reader discovers that much of the pressure came not from God, but from constant inner checking. The relationship was not failing - it was being monitored.This book does not ask readers to abandon prayer, Scripture, or belief. It gently removes the weight many carried while trying to protect closeness. When the measuring softens, something unexpected appears: rest.Not emotional excitement.Not a dramatic experience.Just a steady awareness that the relationship was never as fragile as it felt.For those who have believed sincerely but quietly felt exhausted, this is not a corrective book.It is a relieving one. About the AuthorYram Hossoo is a musician, writer, and disruptor who has spent decades at the intersection of art, spirit, and social truth. From the live stage to the quiet study, he has pursued one mission: to strip away the noise of thought and recover the signal of clarity.His work fuses courtroom precision with poetic fire, exposing the illusions that keep people trapped in performance and confusion. Through Post-Religious Grace Music, the Mechanics of Faith framework, and a growing library of books, Yram helps readers and listeners move beyond inherited systems into the living reality of identity restored.He writes not as a guru or a gatekeeper, but as one who has learned to distrust the voice of thought and trust instead the witness of Spirit. His projects-spanning songs, sermons, podcasts, and visual parables-carry one thread: clarity is rest, and rest is freedom.