What if the problem was never that you were broken…but that you were divided After more than thirty years searching across countries, disciplines, and extremes of human experience, Christine Joanna Hart came to a conclusion most therapy avoids: We are not singular.We are structured. And until that structure is understood, no amount of talking therapy, coping strategies, or surface-level insight will bring lasting change—particularly for those carrying deep trauma, including survivors of sexual abuse, rape trauma, and early psychological fragmentation. A certified psychotherapist and initiated shaman, Hart did not confine her research to consulting rooms. As a former Fleet Street investigative journalist, she pursued the question of human behaviour to its furthest edges—studying, interviewing, and visiting some of the most disturbed and divided minds in existence, including serial offenders whose internal fragmentation had broken through into the world in catastrophic ways.What she found was not randomness, but pattern.A system.A structure within the human psyche—one that exists not only in the extreme, but in all of us.In this book, Hart; a survivor of repeating childhood rape and violence; maps that structure with unusual clarity, revealing how trauma, abuse, rape, neglect, and overwhelming experience divide the self into functional parts—some hidden, some dominant, some carrying unbearable material, and others working tirelessly to keep the system intact. This is why so many people feel: unable to move forward despite years of therapystuck in cycles of anxiety, depression, or emotional numbnessdisconnected from themselves or their own livesas though something essential is missing or "e;not quite right"e;exhausted from trying to function while feeling internally divided This book explains why. But it does more than explain.This is the story of how Hart uncovered her own internal system—and how, through that process, she developed 'Consciousness Activation Therapy,' a method designed not to manage symptoms, but to restore access to the full architecture of the mind. The result is not simply healing. It is activation. A close friend of the late author and philosopher, Colin Wilson, recognised in her work a rare intellectual and experiential depth, comparing her approach to thinkers who sought not merely to describe the human condition, but to expand it. Criminologist Chris Berry-Dee has described Hart's work as essential reading, noting that she is not just an observer of these realities, but someone who has "e;walked the walk."e; This is a book for those who: have experienced trauma, including sexual trauma or abusehave struggled to heal despite years of therapyfeel internally divided, blocked, or unable to fully livesense that their mind holds more than they can currently accessare seeking a deeper, more complete form of psychological and emotional recovery And for those who are ready to understand—not just what happened to them—but how to reclaim what was lost, restore what was divided, and activate the life that has been held back.