Welcome to Ink and Spirits by NAIRA
Review a Book

Emotional control can feel like a cage with invisible bars.
Unlike physical restraints, emotional control is subtle, insidious, and slow. It doesn’t leave bruises or scars that others can see — it leaves questions unanswered, identities unformed, and voices silent. People who live under emotional domination for years often lose touch with their own inner rhythms: what they feel, what they want, and what they deserve. Their voice becomes something they once had — not something they currently wield.
But finding that voice again is both the most difficult and the most transformative step toward freedom. It’s not just about speaking up; it’s about reclaiming selfhood after long years of having someone else define you. Stories — both real and fictional — play a powerful role here. They help us see ourselves in others, feel language for what we have lived through, and ultimately reclaim words that were once stolen by silence.
Emotional control happens through patterns, not isolated events. It is enforced in:
constant criticism that erodes self-confidence
dismissive responses to emotional expression
manipulation that confuses truth and reality
withholding affection until compliance is achieved
These patterns are rarely dramatic in a single moment — they are quiet, cumulative, and persistent. Over time, the victim begins to second-guess their own perception. They start filtering their emotional experiences through the eyes of the controller, slowly internalising a new “reality” in which their voice matters less than survival.
Research shows that long-term emotional abuse rewires the brain’s threat responses, making silence feel safer than expression and compliance feel safer than confrontation. This neuropsychological shift isn’t just metaphorical — it’s physiological, affecting stress response, memory, and emotional regulation.
Yet when the brain is tuned to fear, voice becomes both power and threat.
That’s where stories enter the healing space.
Fiction — especially when informed by lived experience — helps translate internal truth into language. It gives form to intangible feelings and names them. This is why many survivors find that reading or writing narrative reflects their own emotional lives more honestly than lists of symptoms or psychology texts. Emotional truth often lives in detail, texture, and context, not in clinical definitions.
Stories teach us that emotional survival isn’t just about escaping control — it’s about learning to trust one’s own perceptions again. They show the inner landscape of someone learning to articulate fear, desire, shame, and hope in ways that clinical language rarely captures.
This truth is beautifully illustrated in Naira Khan’s novel Sun on Your Back.
Sun on Your Back is a deeply human story that follows Diara Kruger, a woman shaped by years of emotional and physical control within her family — a legacy of abuse that has left her negotiating the aftermath long into adulthood. The novel oscillates between Diara’s traumatic past in Zimbabwe and her present life in London, where she must confront the deep, unspoken wounds that have guided her relationships, self-worth, and capacity for intimacy.
The book doesn’t just recount experiences of control and harm — it embodies them. Diara’s inner world reveals how years of manipulation and repression distort self-perception, make vulnerability feel dangerous, and create emotional patterns that persist long after the controlling figure is gone. Through court scenes, family memory, and moments of connection, readers witness Diara — and by extension, many survivors — struggle to rediscover the very voice that emotional control had muted.
Sun on Your Back is a narrative about reclaiming voice with dignity, not just asserting it for the sake of noise. Diara doesn’t simply speak louder at the end; she relearns how to think, feel, and trust herself again — a process that true healing demands.
It is a common misconception that “leaving” emotional control is the end of the journey. In reality, that departure is often the beginning of internal reconstruction.
Voices that were once suppressed don’t automatically spring back when the controller steps away. Instead, many survivors feel:
emotional emptiness
fear of being wrong
anxiety about rejection
hesitation to trust
These are not signs of weakness. They are echoes of control, not definitions of self. They are residues, not realities.
The survivor must now do something they may never have done before: listen to themselves. And that is harder than listening to the controller.
Reclaiming your voice after years of emotional control doesn’t happen overnight — but it does begin with small, intentional acts. Here are some supportive steps:
Often, individuals who have been emotionally controlled are not used to identifying or naming their emotions. Start small — one feeling per day.
Write consistently without editing. This is your private audience; your voice doesn’t need permission to exist here.
Begin asserting small preferences — what you want for dinner, how you like your space — to build confidence in expressing needs.
Talking to trusted people or writing creatively can externalise internal experiences — and externalising is part of reclaiming voice.
Books, art, music, and films that resonate with your experience remind you that your story is part of a larger human tapestry — not a solitary silence.
Finding your voice isn’t just an individual journey — it’s relational. Many survivors find healing in sharing narratives with others who have lived similar experiences. Community validates the voice that control tried to erase. It affirms that the words you struggled to articulate are not only real — they are shared by others.
Support groups, trauma-informed therapy, and creative writing workshops can offer relational spaces where your voice is received, reflected, and respected.
Voice isn’t just about being heard. It’s about finding people who listen. And good listening changes neurological pathways — literally reinforcing safety, trust, and emotional openness.
Sometimes, finding your voice does not begin with speech. It begins with truth within silence. It begins with noticing that your nervous system has adapted to fear — and that your body deserves safety. Voice can take many forms:
steady breath
calm sensation
bodily boundaries
emotional clarity
personal agency
Each of these is a language of self, a form of expression that precedes words.
When emotional control has shaped your inner world for years, voice can feel like a distant memory — like a language forgotten through disuse. But voice doesn’t disappear — it adapts. It goes dormant. It mutates into compliance, silence, and self-doubt.
Reclaiming it means stepping into your own narrative, piece by piece.
Stories like Sun on Your Back don’t just tell fictional tales; they validate emotional truth. They show the reader that surviving control is not the same as healing from it — and that finding your voice is not just an act of expression, but an act of reclamation.
So begin gently. Speak to yourself first — your inner world needs patience, not pressure. Then speak to others. Your voice, quiet at first, will grow stronger. Not because it needs to shout — but because it finally listens to itself.