<p>Sometimes, the worst situations can bring the best out of us. When we least expect it, surprises just come along and show up.</p><p>For author Thomas L. Murphy, guilt and sorrow were the forerunners to peace and contentment. Although the road to enlightenment was a rugged one, there is still a light at the end of the tunnel.</p><p>“Throughout the process of physical incarceration, I gained psychological liberation, and in the midst of it all, Ghetto Psychology was conceived. When I finally walked out of those prison gates, after 15 years, Ghetto Psychology was full grown, as I was now,” humbly expresses the author.</p><p>He refuses to sugar coat it, or patch it up. He knows that the cure for poverty and self-destruction is paradoxical. On one hand, it’s complex because it takes diligent, consistent effort. On the other hand, it’s as simple as seeing things differently.</p><p>Ghetto Psychology is not an arrow to self-pleasure, wealth, or fame, but to those who are sick and tired of their old selves and ill choices.</p>