In I Was the Prisoner … But Also the Guardian, author Adrian Gabriel Dumitru explores one of life’s deepest paradoxes: that every human being is both a captive and a keeper of their own cage. Available on Amazon, Google Play Books, and Apple Books, this philosophical and spiritual work examines the invisible prisons we build through fear, routine, and emotional conditioning — and reveals how awareness can unlock their gates.
Dumitru begins with an unsettling realization: for most of our lives, we feel trapped without truly understanding why. We blame circumstances, other people, or fate, yet the walls that confine us are made from our own thoughts and beliefs. The author reflects that the “prison” is not external but internal — created by self-doubt, guilt, and the comfort of familiarity. Even when the door is open, many remain inside, afraid to step into the unknown.
Through poetic and reflective essays, Dumitru traces the journey from unconscious victimhood to conscious awakening. He writes that every fear, disappointment, or emotional wound becomes a chain we carry until we decide to let go. But the act of liberation is never easy. The “guardian” inside us, built from ego and control, resists change. It tells us that safety lies in repetition, even when repetition breeds suffering. True courage, the author suggests, comes from confronting this inner guardian with compassion rather than rebellion.
What gives the book its power is its honesty. Dumitru does not present himself as a teacher above pain but as someone who has lived through it — who has been both prisoner and guard. His words flow like a dialogue between two parts of the self: the one that longs for freedom and the one that fears it. Through introspection, he reveals that awareness is the only key capable of unlocking our cages.
The essays encourage readers to question: What limits do I create for myself? What emotions am I protecting instead of healing? As these questions unfold, the metaphor of the prison transforms into a lesson about responsibility. Freedom is not something we earn; it is something we remember.
Ultimately, I Was the Prisoner … But Also the Guardian is a meditation on self-liberation. It reminds us that the greatest battles are fought within — and that once we recognize ourselves as both prisoner and guardian, the search for freedom ends where it truly begins: inside the mind.









