Born on July 25, 1978, in Beirut, Lebanon, Ramzi Najjar is a Post-performance philosopher and author whose work emerges at the intersection of lived experience and rigorous intellectual inquiry. A graduate of Louise Wegmann College, he earned his bachelor’s degree in Political Science and Public Administration from the American University of Beirut in 2001, laying the foundation for a life dedicated to understanding the structures that shape thought, perception, and society.
Najjar’s literary journey began unexpectedly during the global COVID-19 lockdowns of 2020. Writing was not an ambition—it was a calling. What had long been forming within him demanded expression. This period birthed his first book, The YOU Beyond You: The Knowledge of the Willing, a foundational exploration of perception, energetic intelligence, and the boundaries of the human mind.
He followed this with The Ultimate Human Secrets (2021), uncovering the hidden architecture of unconscious influence and the vibrational fields shaping experience, and The Echoes of Enigma (2024), a profound inquiry into the Akashic and existential nature of memory, destiny, and energetic entrapment.
In the same year, Najjar released How to Hack Back Your Mind, offering practical tools for mental sovereignty, and Our Matrix Decoded (2025), an incisive examination of the internal and external systems that silently shape perception and experience. The Art of Pushing Forward (2025) followed, revealing the rhythm of progress and the energetic anatomy of resistance.
It was with his final three works that Najjar fully transcended genre:
The Ego Pill maps the biological, relational, and spiritual crisis of ego collapse.
WHY GOD SLEEPS WHEN WE WAKE UP dismantles the internalized need for divine authority, revealing the stillness behind all spiritual performance.
Exit the Echo, his culminating work, delivers the most refined and complete articulation of his philosophy—a confrontation with the architecture of identity, validation, and performance itself.
Together, these nine works form a cohesive philosophical corpus—neither self-help nor traditional metaphysics. They establish a new genre: Post-Performance Philosophy, a post-collapse, post-performance existential clarity that does not aim to “improve” the reader but to dismantle the very structures that created the need for improvement.



