A vizier from 4,000 years ago taught me something about my inbox.
Ptahhotep was Egypt's prime minister around 2400 BCE. The advice he wrote down — listen before you speak, be fair when no one is watching, let balance set your pace — somehow reads like it was written for your group chat, your team meeting, your worst Tuesday.
Quiet Strength takes 30 of his maxims and turns them into something you can actually use this week. Each chapter is short by design: a principle in plain English, a story you'll recognize from your own life, a brief discussion, a few questions worth sitting with, and one small challenge to try before the next chapter.
No jargon. No lectures. No 300-page slog.
You'll find tools for calmer conflicts, harder conversations handled with grace, habits that survive your worst week, and a steadier way of leading — whether you're running a team, raising a family, or just trying to get your evenings back. Read one chapter a day for a month, or one a week for a season. Either way, the goal isn't to admire wisdom. It's to live it.
For readers of Ryan Holiday, James Clear, and anyone who's tired of self-help that doesn't fit into a real life.