What happens when the world forgets how to move at a human pace?
In a society quietly overheating from speed, urgency, and constant performance, a young woman named Nya does something radical without ever intending to. She listens.
As others push forward, she slows. As systems strain, she remains still. And without speeches, movements, or demands, something long forgotten begins to return.
Regery: Returning to Rhythm is a novel about regulation, silence, and the intelligence beneath pace. It follows Nya from childhood into adulthood as her presence subtly alters the spaces she inhabits. Attempts to name, capture, or scale what she embodies inevitably fail. Regery cannot be taught, enforced, or optimized. It can only be remembered.
Blending speculative undertones with literary prose, this book explores how words shape freedom, how bodies hold wisdom before language arrives, and how humanity relearns balance not through progress, but through restraint.
This is not a story about saving the world.
It is a story about remembering how to live inside it.
For readers drawn to reflective fiction, philosophical depth, and quiet power, Regery offers a rare experience: a novel that does not rush you forward, but brings you back.