12 Rules for Life
“The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately sick; who can understand it?” — Jeremiah 17:9 12 Rules for Life: Meaning in a World That Guarantees Suffering Introduction — The Problem the Book Refuses to Look Away From Jordan B. Peterson’s 12 Rules for Life begins from a premise most modern culture desperately tries to avoid: life is suffering . Not metaphorically. Not occasionally. Structurally. Pain, loss, betrayal, illness, aging, and death are not malfunctions of the system — they are the system. Most ideologies, self-help movements, and political programs promise escape. Peterson offers something far more unsettling and far more honest: the question is not how to avoid suffering, but whether your life is structured so that suffering is worth bearing . This is why the book does not read like a manual. It reads like a confession, a sermon, and a clinical report at once. Peterson circles the same themes obsessively — responsibility, truth, resentment, chaos, ...