The Lie About Love is part memoir and part examination of the emotional patterns that keep many women tied to relationships marked by inconsistency, confusion, and hope that never quite settles.Written from lived experience, Zen Prem challenges the quiet belief that chemistry must be chaotic and that longing must mean love.Zen's writing has reached millions on Facebook, where readers recognised themselves in his reflections on emotional pain, psychological patterns, and the ways people lose themselves while trying to be chosen. This book continues that work in a deeper, more sustained form.The book explores the dynamics that make certain relationships so hard to leave, including emotional neglect, subtle psychological pressure, and the kind of distortion often described as gaslighting. It speaks directly to the woman who has stayed too long, doubted her own perception, or taken responsibility for behaviours that were never hers to carry.This is not a clinical text and does not offer professional analysis. It is a clear, honest account of how certain forms of emotional and psychological mistreatment feel from the inside, and why they can be mistaken for passion.The book looks at: - How early emotional imprints shape who feels familiar- Why inconsistency creates a stronger pull than stability- How adrenaline can masquerade as attraction- How overgiving becomes a way of coping- Why gaslighting and emotional neglect are so easily minimised- How hope becomes part of the cycle- What steady, mutual love actually feels likeThe writing is plain, direct, and without embellishment. It acknowledges the shame, confusion, and self-doubt that arise in relationships where emotional or psychological abuse is present, even in subtle forms. It offers the reader recognition without judgement and restores a sense of steadiness where the relationship has taken it away.The Lie About Love is for anyone who has doubted themselves more than they doubted the relationship. It gives language to experiences that are often hidden and points back towards steadiness and self-respect.