Why I Wrote History Waits to Be Heard
Post Summary: Why *History Waits to Be Heard* was written β not for charts or prestige, but to question the historical record, center erased voices, and advocate for Equality Without Distinction.
Most of my life, I assumed history was more or less settled. The textbooks told a storyβof great kings, famous battles, and slow progress toward something we now call modern society. But when I started looking more closely, especially at the role of women in that history, the story fell apart.
What I found wasnβt just missing pagesβit was missing people. Missing voices. Whole lives and contributions that had been erased or ignored, simply because they didnβt fit the dominant narrative.
Thatβs how History Waits to Be Heard was born.
Iβm not a historian in the academic sense. Iβm a researcher, a questioner, someone whoβs never quite fit into traditional roles or accepted traditional answers. My book is driven by a simple philosophy I call Equality Without Distinctionβthe idea that we should see each other not as categories, but as contributors. Not as genders or labels, but as people with value.
Writing this book became more than just an intellectual exercise. It became a mission. I wanted to lift the veil on how power, gender, and societal memory shape the world we live in todayβand what we lose when we only tell half the story.
This blog will follow that same spirit. Sometimes Iβll share behind-the-scenes insights, or historical reflections that didnβt make it into the book. Other times Iβll talk about my creative process or things Iβve learned from readers. And maybeβjust maybeβIβll help you see history a little differently too.
After all, history isnβt whatβs written in books. Itβs in the air around us. It waits to be heard.
β Darren Palmer