You Are Allowed to Leave cover art

You Are Allowed to Leave

Preview

Get 30 days of Standard free

£5.99/mo after trial. Cancel monthly.
Try for £0.00
More purchase options

You Are Allowed to Leave

By: Dr. Joren Dorne
Narrated by: Andy Robert
Try for £0.00

£5.99 a month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Buy Now for £7.77

Buy Now for £7.77

Summary

What if the life you are holding onto is the very thing exhausting you?

You Are Allowed to Leave is an audiobook for anyone who feels quietly stuck, emotionally drained, or worn down by staying too long in situations that no longer fit. This can be a job, a relationship, or a version of yourself that once made sense but now feels heavy.

This audiobook explores the moments we rarely talk about. Remaining out of loyalty, fear, or habit. Ignoring the internal signal that something is no longer right. Carrying guilt for wanting rest, space, or change without a dramatic reason.

It does not push you to make sudden decisions or reinvent your life. Instead, it helps you listen more honestly to what you already know and trust that awareness.

Narrated in a steady, thoughtful tone, this is an easy listen for walks, commutes, or quiet moments. It feels less like advice and more like a conversation that stays with you after it ends.

You will not be told what to do. You will be reminded that peace is not something you earn by enduring what drains you. It is something you are allowed to choose.

If you have ever felt the quiet pull that says this is not where I am meant to be, this audiobook is for you.

©2025 Joren Dorne (P)2025 Joren Dorne
Addiction & Recovery Personal Development Personal Success Self-Esteem
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_c
All stars
Most relevant

Listener received this title free

This audiobook was read with aplomb.

I feel that this book addresses a much needed area.

The listener is encouraged to carefully take stock of his situations. If he finds himself trapped, he is given permission to jump ship. It is stated that, often one has remained for duty's sake with unwarranted sacrifice. I agree with the author that emboldenment of an inflexibly loyal servant is appropriate.
Moreover, there is glad release to be had from leaving behind past versions of oneself that no longer serve.

On the other hand, I feel that the advice lends itself to self-indulgent misuse.
The reader is not encouraged to consider genuine obligation or their own importance to other people concerned.

Singleton's soliloquy

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.