What if history’s greatest figures had gone to therapy?

History: Un-Attached takes you past the timelines and into the emotional lives of the people who shaped the world. Instead of memorizing dates, you’ll explore attachment wounds, unmet needs, pride, insecurities, and the inner conflicts that quietly influenced some of history’s biggest decisions.

It’s history—but with its emotional wiring finally exposed.


What This Book Really Does

Each chapter reimagines a well-known figure through the lens of attachment theory, blending historical fact with psychological insight (and the occasional raised eyebrow). You’ll see:

  • How insecurity can spark an entire empire

  • How childhood wounds echo into political decisions

  • How emotional neglect can shape art, revolutions, and destinies

  • How even legends had blind spots, impulses, and “inferiority complex at 2 a.m.” moments

You’ll still learn the history.
Just… with the emotional context left in.

Why You’ll Love It

Smart, emotional, and a little bit cheeky, this book is perfect if you enjoy:

  • History that actually feels human

  • Psychology that doesn’t lecture

  • Humor that’s subtle, sharp, and intentional

  • Stories that reveal why people are the way they are

  • Seeing iconic figures through a completely new (and honest) lens

  • A touch of playfulness mixed with real insight

This isn’t the version of history you learned in school.
It’s the one that finally makes sense.

If you’re a:

  • history lover

  • psychology nerd

  • emotionally curious human

  • lover of stories where people are beautifully flawed

  • therapist who secretly wants to diagnose Napoleon

…then you’re in the right place.

The Heart Behind It


History tells us what happened.
Psychology tells us why it mattered.

History: Un-Attached brings the two together—not to romanticize the past, but to finally give it emotional clarity. Behind every conquest, invention, rebellion, or tragedy is someone who carried their childhood, their fears, and their attachments with them.

Just like all of us.