The $200 Silence: Everyone’s smiling, but nobody’s okay.
Across alumni chats, churches, and social circles, people are breaking in silence. The $200 Silence reveals the emotional cost of pretending that everything is fine while quietly drowning beneath financial stress, loneliness, and invisible expectations.
Blending powerful storytelling with community insight, Rev. Dr. Ango Fomuso Ekellem exposes how our culture rewards appearance over authenticity and what it truly costs to keep up the show. From late rent payments hidden behind perfect posts to friendships that only show up for "Happy Birthday" or "RIP," this book captures the global epidemic of quiet suffering with honesty and compassion.
But The $200 Silence is not just an exposé; it is a movement. Through reflective chapters and a practical Action Appendix, it shows how ordinary people can rebuild community with substance, empathy, and structure.
You’ll learn how to:
Notice silent suffering before it becomes tragedy
Build "help without shame" systems in your community
Turn casual groups into support networks
Mentor and check in without intrusion
Redefine generosity beyond money and performance
If you’ve ever felt unseen while everyone else seemed fine, this book will feel like a mirror and a map.
Sometimes, all it takes to change a life is $200, a call, or the courage to care.
For readers of Brené Brown, Gabor Maté, and Austin Channing Brown, this book will make you rethink what it means to belong, to help, and to love.