';Public policy is not just about shaping systems - it is about shaping oneself.'InThe Policy Self, Nitin Saluja distills nearly two decades across government, industry, and diplomacy into a rare exploration of the inner life of policy work. This is not a book of famous case studies. It is a guided tour of the quieter forces that shape influence: how practitioners think under pressure, choose their words, read a room, time an intervention, and hold their ground in ambiguity.Across ten reflective chapters, Saluja distills what it truly means to practice policy as a discipline of patience and purpose. From the rhythm of negotiation to the ethics of tone, from the psychology of meetings to the art of timing, this book offers a deeply considered account of how effective professionals operate in the spaces between institutions, ideas, and intent.For public servants, corporate affairs leaders, diplomats, consultants, and students of governance,The Policy Selfoffers something increasingly rare: the feel of mentorship. Calm. Precise. Unhurried. It is an invitation to see policy not just as a profession, but as a way of being. Where clarity becomes influence, restraint becomes strength, and meaning is found in the space between intention and outcome.