Unbroken: A Quiet Survival is not a story of triumph in the traditional sense. It does not celebrate winning, conquering, or overcoming in loud ways. Instead, it traces the quieter, often invisible journey of survival—the kind that happens when no one is watching, and when strength is mistaken for silence. Written in fragments, poems, reflections, and moments, Unbroken follows an inner landscape shaped by love that almost lasted, relationships that changed without warning, and pain that did not announce itself before settling in. The book moves through phases of falling, healing, and rising—not as clean transitions, but as overlapping states of being, where grief and hope often exist together. These pages speak to those who have loved deeply and lost quietly, who learned to function even when they were breaking, and who stayed—not because staying was easy, but because leaving required answers they did not yet have. There are no promises of complete healing here, no formulas for moving on. What the book offers instead is honesty: an unfiltered look at how survival actually feels from the inside. Unbroken is not meant to instruct or advise. It is meant to sit beside the reader, to acknowledge the weight of what they carry, and to remind them that endurance itself can be an art. This book is for those who kept going without knowing why, and lived long enough to realise that survival, too, is a form of courage.