You know what to do. You've read the books, watched the videos, listened to the podcasts. You understand the principles. You have the information.
So why aren't you changing?
The Knowledge Trap explores the uncomfortable gap between knowing and doing—why understanding truth doesn't automatically set us free, and why more information often leads to less transformation.
This isn't another self-help book promising breakthrough insights. It's an honest examination of why self-help so rarely works, why smart people stay stuck, and what actually creates lasting change.
Through philosophy, psychology, and practical observation, this book reveals:
Why consuming more content often makes change harder, not easier. The cognitive mechanisms that turn knowledge into paralysis instead of power. How the brain protects existing patterns even when we consciously want to change. The difference between intellectual understanding and embodied transformation. Why motivation fails and what works instead.
The Knowledge Trap isn't about acquiring more information. It's about understanding why information alone is never enough—and what bridges the gap between knowing and being.
If you've ever felt frustrated by the distance between what you know and how you live, this book offers clarity without false promises. No quick fixes. No magic formulas. Just an honest look at why change is hard and what makes it possible.
For chronic learners, self-help consumers, and anyone tired of understanding without transformation.