Suffer
: Reviewers highlight its "anguish-proof" strategies, such as separating facts from the emotional story we build around them and building "resilience muscles" through intentional discomfort.
: It forces readers to ask, "How far would you go for your child?". SUFFER
: Hollins encourages moving from "why me" to "what now," reclaiming agency even in situations that cannot be fixed. : Reviewers highlight its "anguish-proof" strategies
: The book argues that while pain is inevitable, suffering is often a choice based on how we narrate our struggles. SUFFER
