TroLLoBloger

TroLLoBloger

Over the years, I’ve gone through… a lot of versions of myself. From being ill-mannered (and a bit ignorant), through the rebellious “always against the current” phase, to someone who has gathered experience and knowledge in almost every field — not because I’m a genius, but because life has a weird habit of dragging you through everything until you finally start connecting the dots.

And yes — life taught me (and still teaches me) one very annoying, yet valuable thing: don’t rush. Not decisions, not judgments, not that “I know better” attitude. Still, I keep repeating some lessons… more than once. Maybe out of stubbornness. Maybe because some truths take time to learn — especially when you’re convinced “it won’t happen to me.”

Truth — the beautiful and uncomfortable kind

One of those lessons is to always (literally always) tell the truth and fight for it — even when it’s not convenient, not popular, and doesn’t win applause. Three of my projects suffered because of that. Not because truth is “bad,” but because pure, hard-to-swallow truth isn’t for everyone. That’s not an insult — it’s just a fact. Some people want to hear “everything’s fine.” Others want to hear “you’re right.” I’m more often the person who says: “It’s not fine. And you’re not right. But we can fix it.”

Why TroLLoBloger

I chose this pseudonym as a symbol of my growth. Not as a “perfect person,” but as someone:

My goal isn’t to slam truth into your face. My goal is to serve it in a way you can actually digest. Think of it as truth, gently reheated — still truth, just not straight from the freezer of reality with a slap.

Writing speaks louder than talking for me

I love writing articles — honestly, I love writing in general. Much more than talking.
Maybe because:

Writing gives me space to breathe. It gives me time to think. To organize. To be honest without shouting.

My forums — small, but mine

Right now I run three young forums built on Discourse, and I’m genuinely proud of them. Not because they’re “the biggest,” but because they’re places where I try to keep:

And this is where I say a big thank you to the creators of Discourse — and to everyone who keeps supporting and maintaining it. What they built isn’t just a platform. It’s a tool for real communities.