Meet the Authors

Elinor Moshe

Elinor Moshe is a co-founder of Truth of You, Founder of The Construction Coach, 4X Award-Winning Author and Podcast Host of Resonant Truth.

By every external measure, her career reflected success: published books, authority, recognition, thought leadership. She did what was expected. She followed the rules as they were given and arrived where the system promised she would.

And yet, the cost was cumulative.

Beneath the appearance of authenticity, a rift formed between her external achievements and her internal reality. Success demanded ongoing adaptation, suppression, and allegiance to false authorities. Over time, this produced a deep energetic split — incremental, corrosive, and largely invisible. The body carried what the identity could not. What appeared coherent on the surface concealed a long erosion beneath it.

This was not success. This was its shadow.

The collapse that followed was not symbolic. It required years of physical, psychological, and energetic integration to confront what had been exchanged in the pursuit of legitimacy, authority, and belonging. Returning to her past, her conditioning, and the value systems she had inherited — including the false authorities she had internalised — Elinor began dismantling the internal architecture that had shaped her identity and constrained her expression.

Together with Daniel, this inquiry became The Shadow of Success — a structural reckoning that examines how identity is shaped, rewarded, and distorted within false systems of authority. The work functions simultaneously as exposure and shield: revealing the mechanisms that produce hollow identities while protecting those formed under the same inherited falsehoods from further internal erosion, as truth, coherence, and embodied authority are reclaimed.

Daniel Darman

Co-founder of Truth of You, Daniel has always occupied a vantage point slightly outside the dominant cultural frame. His inquiry has never been centred on personal fulfilment or individual purpose, but on the larger systems that shape perception, belief, and behaviour long before choice becomes available. Society, culture, and inherited models of reality have been his primary objects of scrutiny.

Over time, Daniel reached the limits of what both orthodox knowledge systems and their fringe alternatives could explain. Political, psychological, spiritual, and countercultural narratives all promised insight, yet consistently failed to account for the deeper forces organising identity, suffering, and adaptation at scale. Rather than replacing one worldview with another, he turned toward examining structure itself: how meaning is manufactured, how coherence is rewarded, and how deviation is subtly disciplined.

This inquiry revealed that what presents as individual struggle is often the downstream effect of collective distortion. Early emotional dislocation, chronic health patterns, and inherited karmic themes were not treated as personal pathology, but as signals of misalignment between the human organism and the systems it is required to inhabit. Suffering became intelligible not as a flaw to be corrected, but as information emerging from structural mismatch.

Daniel’s work now operates at the intersection of metaphysics, symbolic systems, and direct energetic perception. Drawing on philosophy, mysticism, astrology, and non-linear modes of awareness, he engages reality beneath ideology and identity, where narratives lose their authority and organising forces become visible.

Standing neither inside nor in opposition to prevailing systems, Daniel brings a critical, unsentimental perspective to how cultures produce identity, normalise disconnection, and mistake adaptation for maturity. His work does not seek reform or reassurance, but clarity — particularly at the points where accepted explanations stop working.