
My Client Closed Their Site. My Work Went With It.
A reminder to all creators that our work on web2 platforms isn’t really ours

About Me & How I Ended up on Paragraph
Words, Logos, and a New Beginning

What I Learned About Web3 in My First 24 Hours on Paragraph
If you are a curious, creative, non-tech person, this is for you.
Reflections on Language, Meaning, and the Decentralized Future



My Client Closed Their Site. My Work Went With It.
A reminder to all creators that our work on web2 platforms isn’t really ours

About Me & How I Ended up on Paragraph
Words, Logos, and a New Beginning

What I Learned About Web3 in My First 24 Hours on Paragraph
If you are a curious, creative, non-tech person, this is for you.
Reflections on Language, Meaning, and the Decentralized Future

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Every Christian will tell you that suffering should bring us closer to God. Yet, more often than not, it takes us further away. That’s just reality.
We, humans, are extremely talented at turning every problem into ultimate misery. When we face a painful experience (=a legitimate reason for suffering, such as illness, loss, financial difficulties, damaged relationships, etc.), we tend to look at it from the worst possible perspective and add tons of our mental and emotional baggage. That’s how we make ourselves feel desperate.
I might sound harsh here, but Paul Tripp doesn’t sound like that. He is gentle and empathetic.
This book will make you see what exactly you are doing to enlarge your troubles and show you how to reverse the process.
You can get it from most internet bookstores, and it is available in many languages. I’m not sharing a link because I’m not writing this to sell you anything. I just want to spread the word about the book we all need.
One more thing: this is not self-help. If you’re truly suffering, you must have realized that your “self” can’t help you and that mindfulness is ultimately rubbish. This is just help from a wise person who knows how to deal with pain, and it works because it brings you closer to the only person who has the resources and is willing to lift you up when you fall: Jesus Christ.
Paul Tripp is fantastic in explaining how to turn suffering into opportunities for growth in faith, which naturally leads to joy.
Not just explaining, but showing, so we can feel it, not just understand it. He shares his own painful experience and is open about all aspects of it, including an initially wrong mindset that made him feel worse.
If you’re interested in the comprehensive theology behind the reality of suffering, enriched by historical and cultural context, read Tim Keller’s Walking with God through Pain and Suffering.
But if you need immediate comfort, take Suffering by Paul David Tripp now. (Keller’s book is also personal and wonderful, but Tripp’s is more convenient if you have an urgent matter.)
Your life is beyond your control. Even if you aren’t suffering right now, you certainly will at some point.
(Unpopular opinion, isn't it? It's just that it isn't merely an opinion; it’s the truth.)
That’s all. Feel free to ignore my post, but don’t ignore the book. No way you don’t need it.
Every Christian will tell you that suffering should bring us closer to God. Yet, more often than not, it takes us further away. That’s just reality.
We, humans, are extremely talented at turning every problem into ultimate misery. When we face a painful experience (=a legitimate reason for suffering, such as illness, loss, financial difficulties, damaged relationships, etc.), we tend to look at it from the worst possible perspective and add tons of our mental and emotional baggage. That’s how we make ourselves feel desperate.
I might sound harsh here, but Paul Tripp doesn’t sound like that. He is gentle and empathetic.
This book will make you see what exactly you are doing to enlarge your troubles and show you how to reverse the process.
You can get it from most internet bookstores, and it is available in many languages. I’m not sharing a link because I’m not writing this to sell you anything. I just want to spread the word about the book we all need.
One more thing: this is not self-help. If you’re truly suffering, you must have realized that your “self” can’t help you and that mindfulness is ultimately rubbish. This is just help from a wise person who knows how to deal with pain, and it works because it brings you closer to the only person who has the resources and is willing to lift you up when you fall: Jesus Christ.
Paul Tripp is fantastic in explaining how to turn suffering into opportunities for growth in faith, which naturally leads to joy.
Not just explaining, but showing, so we can feel it, not just understand it. He shares his own painful experience and is open about all aspects of it, including an initially wrong mindset that made him feel worse.
If you’re interested in the comprehensive theology behind the reality of suffering, enriched by historical and cultural context, read Tim Keller’s Walking with God through Pain and Suffering.
But if you need immediate comfort, take Suffering by Paul David Tripp now. (Keller’s book is also personal and wonderful, but Tripp’s is more convenient if you have an urgent matter.)
Your life is beyond your control. Even if you aren’t suffering right now, you certainly will at some point.
(Unpopular opinion, isn't it? It's just that it isn't merely an opinion; it’s the truth.)
That’s all. Feel free to ignore my post, but don’t ignore the book. No way you don’t need it.
Share Dialog
Share Dialog
This piece, which is sincere, sympathetic, and incredibly uplifting, reframes suffering without resorting to clichés. It clarifies why suffering frequently drives people away from faith and how Paul David Tripp softly illustrates a better course. With knowledge, empathy, and perspective, it provides genuine consolation, not platitudes, for anyone going through difficulty now or in the future. It is clear, practical, and Christ-centered. Keep supporting each other
Let me tell you about the most important book I read in 2025. It is not about crypto, unless you've lost everything. It is not about business, unless your professional life makes you miserable. It is not about relationships, unless you feel estranged from the people you love most. It certainly is not about religious practices or mental techniques. No “unless” here. It is about suffering, and it points toward an ultimate way of dealing with pain.
Paul Tripp’s Suffering is presented as an empathetic guide to reframing pain as a path to faith, with Tim Keller’s Walking with God through Pain and Suffering named for deeper theology. Mindfulness is seen as inadequate; the work offers practical, Christ-centered comfort. @philologist
This piece, which is sincere, sympathetic, and incredibly uplifting, reframes suffering without resorting to clichés. It clarifies why suffering frequently drives people away from faith and how Paul David Tripp softly illustrates a better course. With knowledge, empathy, and perspective, it provides genuine consolation, not platitudes, for anyone going through difficulty now or in the future. It is clear, practical, and Christ-centered. Keep supporting each other
Let me tell you about the most important book I read in 2025. It is not about crypto, unless you've lost everything. It is not about business, unless your professional life makes you miserable. It is not about relationships, unless you feel estranged from the people you love most. It certainly is not about religious practices or mental techniques. No “unless” here. It is about suffering, and it points toward an ultimate way of dealing with pain.
Paul Tripp’s Suffering is presented as an empathetic guide to reframing pain as a path to faith, with Tim Keller’s Walking with God through Pain and Suffering named for deeper theology. Mindfulness is seen as inadequate; the work offers practical, Christ-centered comfort. @philologist