The Architecture of a Buried Life
Anna Landolac is a designer by trade and a storyteller by necessity. For years, she built beautiful spaces for other people while quietly trying to reconstruct her own life. A survivor of emotional abuse, generational trauma, and breast cancer, Anna does not write to be poetic—she writes because silence nearly destroyed her.
Anna approaches storytelling the same way she approaches design: with precision, restraint, and deep respect for what people live with every day. Her work—both on the page and in physical space—centers truth, containment, and the possibility of safety after chaos.
She lives with her son, Kiko, and her cat, Lynx, in a quiet home shaped by hard-won peace, real laughter, and the kind of love that only arrives after everything else has been stripped away.
Vision
The Evolution of a Memoir
What began as personal reflection became something much larger—a story of survival, identity, and transformation.
Diary of a Mad White Woman is not simply a memoir; it is the foundation of Brain Revolution, a broader mission dedicated to awakening minds, breaking generational patterns, and empowering others through radical honesty.
This evolution reflects the power of storytelling to heal, disrupt, and inspire lasting change. Every chapter is part of a greater revolution: one where truth becomes freedom.