Nicholas Hewitt's Blind Faith is not a story of pure sanctification—it's a battle cry for
those who have been broken and are ready to break free. As a USMC veteran and
survivor of religious abuse, Hewitt knows the shape of a prison from the inside. Here,
he invites readers to join him on a raw, unfiltered escape: not from a cell, but from the
cages of trauma, addiction, and the suffocating dogma of weaponized religion. Guided
by the spirit of Harriet Tubman and armed with the philosophical tools of Absurdism
and Eremitism, Hewitt maps his own journey from self-hatred to radical forgiveness.
He confronts the shadowy corners of his psyche, faces the eight-year-old altar boy
convinced he was damned, and learns to see by letting go of everything—even his
own identity. Living within the anima, his long-suppressed self, becomes both a
crucible and a revelation, forcing him to shed ego and discover empathy on the other
side of fear. Blind Faith is a challenge to question every inherited belief, to walk away
from the herd, and to build a faith that is fiercely personal. For anyone ready to chart
their own prison break, Hewitt offers not answers, but a torch to light the way.
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