Description
BROKEN SLEEP
A Memoir of Survival, Grief, Motherhood, Trauma, and the Search for Meaning
Some wounds never fully disappear.
Some memories continue to live quietly beneath the surface, shaping the way we love, fear, survive, and remember.
In Broken Sleep, Margit M. Zhang shares a deeply personal memoir about trauma, emotional exhaustion, family struggle, grief, isolation, spirituality, survival, and the invisible weight carried through years of interrupted rest and emotional pressure.
Through intimate reflections and raw personal experiences, this book explores moments of fear, loss, confusion, resilience, and inner conflict, while also examining the psychological and emotional impact of prolonged stress, caregiving, motherhood, broken relationships, sleeplessness, and unresolved pain.
Broken Sleep is not written as a story of perfection or easy healing.
It is a story about enduring.
About surviving difficult nights when the mind cannot rest.
About continuing forward despite emotional exhaustion.
About searching for meaning during periods of uncertainty, suffering, and personal transformation.
Throughout the memoir, the author reflects on themes including:
– Trauma and emotional survival
– Sleeplessness and chronic stress
– Motherhood and caregiving
– Grief and memory
– Family conflict and isolation
– Spirituality and personal reflection
– Fear, resilience, and identity
– The psychological effects of prolonged emotional pressure
Written with honesty and emotional vulnerability, Broken Sleep invites readers into a deeply human story about suffering, endurance, and the quiet determination required to keep going even when life feels overwhelming.
This memoir reflects the author’s personal experiences, interpretations, emotional reflections, and beliefs. It is intended for literary, reflective, and educational purposes and is not intended as medical or psychological advice.
For anyone who has ever lain awake carrying invisible pain, wondering how to survive another difficult night—
Broken Sleep is a reminder that survival itself can become an act of courage.


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