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Always Fine
The Hidden Cost of Never Falling Apart
Author: Talia Banks
Narrator: AI Voice Talia Banks
Unabridged: 46 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Independently Published
Published: 07/11/2026
Categories: Nonfiction, Self-help, Codependency, Emotions, Personal Growth
Synopsis
This audiobook is narrated by an AI Voice.
If you've ever been called "the strong one," "so easy," or "low-maintenance" — and quietly wondered why you feel more alone than anyone around you — this book explains the hidden mechanism behind it. Composure isn't a personality trait. It's a job you were assigned, often before you were old enough to say no to it, and the body keeps a tab running underneath it for decades.
Through the story of one woman unraveling six months after her father's death, this book traces exactly how chronic emotional suppression rewires the nervous system, why "fine" is the most dangerous word in the English language, and why the people who need you most may be the ones who know you least.
Backed by research on allostatic load, alexithymia, and the physiology of suppressed grief, this is not a book that tells you to just start crying more. It shows you precisely what composure has been protecting you from, what it's quietly costing you now, and the one small, repeatable practice that starts to change it.
If you've spent your life being everyone's rock, it's time to find out what's underneath the rock.
If you've ever been called "the strong one," "so easy," or "low-maintenance" — and quietly wondered why you feel more alone than anyone around you — this book explains the hidden mechanism behind it. Composure isn't a personality trait. It's a job you were assigned, often before you were old enough to say no to it, and the body keeps a tab running underneath it for decades.
Through the story of one woman unraveling six months after her father's death, this book traces exactly how chronic emotional suppression rewires the nervous system, why "fine" is the most dangerous word in the English language, and why the people who need you most may be the ones who know you least.
Backed by research on allostatic load, alexithymia, and the physiology of suppressed grief, this is not a book that tells you to just start crying more. It shows you precisely what composure has been protecting you from, what it's quietly costing you now, and the one small, repeatable practice that starts to change it.
If you've spent your life being everyone's rock, it's time to find out what's underneath the rock.