About The Book

If you’ve pushed, planned, and pulled to attempt to get the world to behave but it’s still not behaving. If you’ve gotten all the things you’ve been told would lead to peace, happiness and security, but still find a restlessness that follows you into every room.

 

This book names the hum that follows us around. It speaks to the fact that we’re not broken, and truly neither is the world, but rather lends a means of looking from a different place, and it’s place that leads to lasting peace. So many people live from out to in because we’re led to believe that once we get the outside to look right, the inside will settle, but the world was never the source of our discomfort and nor will it likely ever be the source of our peace. This book gives insight into what actually works: turning around.

Here are some excerpts from the book:

Timo G. was raised in the church but drifted off course early in life, long before he understood the difference between self-will and God’s will. Like many, he came to believe that fulfillment could be found by pursuing the world and everything it promises.

 

But after striving to acquire more, he found himself not fulfilled, but exhausted, depleted, and unwell. That breaking point led him to search for a new way of living. In that search, he encountered truths and guiding principles shared by those willing to help him see more clearly.

 

What grew from that journey was not only personal relief, but a calling: to help others find freedom from the suffering that burdens so many. Through his writing, Timo now seeks to pass forward the keys that were imparted to him offering a path toward peace, contentment, and a deeper way of living rooted not merely in what we do, but in how we choose to live moving forward.

“Suffering so often arises not from a lack of effort, but from effort applied from the wrong origin.”

“What, if anything, is actually being asked of a human life?”

“Reality unfolds according to universal laws that actually do consult belief and desire, but do not unfold according to preference.”