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Knowing When to Leave: When Staying in a Relationship Is Costing Too Much
Indigo
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Knowing When to Leave: When Staying in a Relationship Is Costing Too Much
By None
Current price: $8.69
Original price: $9.99


By None
Knowing When to Leave: When Staying in a Relationship Is Costing Too Much
Current price: $8.69
Original price: $9.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Indigo
Some endings do not arrive with drama.
They arrive quietly. In hesitation. In fatigue. In the growing awareness that something no longer fits.
Knowing When to Leave does not argue for staying or for going. It names the moments that unfold before and around clarity. The small compromises. The rehearsed conversations. The relief that appears unexpectedly when you picture yourself somewhere else.
Written for those already noticing misalignment, this book sits with the private terrain of recognising when staying is costing more than it once did. It does not rush resolution or promise reinvention. Instead, it offers steady language for experiences many people move through silently.
Across short, recognitional segments, Jace Sterling explores:
• The early signals that something feels off
• Why people stay longer than they intend
• The decision forming before it is spoken
• The practical and emotional terrain of leaving
• The immediate aftermath and its contradictions
• The quiet stabilisation that follows
This is not a guide to dramatic exits.
It is not an argument against commitment.
It is a companion for the threshold and the space just beyond it.
Sometimes recognition does not demand action. It simply asks to be acknowledged. For readers navigating life after separation, Dare to Be Single continues the reflection from a different stage.
Some endings do not arrive with drama.
They arrive quietly. In hesitation. In fatigue. In the growing awareness that something no longer fits.
Knowing When to Leave does not argue for staying or for going. It names the moments that unfold before and around clarity. The small compromises. The rehearsed conversations. The relief that appears unexpectedly when you picture yourself somewhere else.
Written for those already noticing misalignment, this book sits with the private terrain of recognising when staying is costing more than it once did. It does not rush resolution or promise reinvention. Instead, it offers steady language for experiences many people move through silently.
Across short, recognitional segments, Jace Sterling explores:
• The early signals that something feels off
• Why people stay longer than they intend
• The decision forming before it is spoken
• The practical and emotional terrain of leaving
• The immediate aftermath and its contradictions
• The quiet stabilisation that follows
This is not a guide to dramatic exits.
It is not an argument against commitment.
It is a companion for the threshold and the space just beyond it.
Sometimes recognition does not demand action. It simply asks to be acknowledged. For readers navigating life after separation, Dare to Be Single continues the reflection from a different stage.


















