How do you handle TROLLS? By Brendan Conboy
The story of the troll under the bridge is a Norwegian fairy tale called "The Three Billy Goats Gruff," in which three goats must cross a bridge to reach a meadow for food. A troll living underneath the bridge threatens to eat them, but the smaller goats trick the troll into waiting for the larger, tastier brother. Finally, the biggest goat confronts the troll, butts it off the bridge, and the goats safely reach the meadow.
Modern-day "TROLLS"
are individuals who use the internet to provoke conflict intentionally,
spread hostility, or harass others online for their own amusement or to cause
harm. Their behaviour can range
from posting offensive comments to more malicious actions, such as spreading
disinformation, and it is often driven by a desire to elicit an emotional
reaction or cause disruption.
All of the guidance online says that you
shouldn’t engage with a TROLL, but you don’t necessarily know that they are a
TROLL until you do engage.
I recently encountered someone on my YouTube
channel, who I now regard as a TROLL and his target? - CHRISTIANS. I know this
now because I have checked out some of the videos on his channel.
So, how did I handle this
particular TROLL? The short video that he responded to was me reading from ‘The
Book of Psalms in Rhyme’, followed by a one-line reflective thought. He started
by agreeing with what I was saying, then accused me of reading someone else's
words and following someone else's path. He advised me to find my own path.
I responded by telling him
that I am the author of those words and that God gave me the gift of rhyme in
1986, and that I spent 25 years as a Christian rapper.
The conversation rapidly
devolved, and he told me to look at his channel. There, I found numerous videos
that are inflammatory and hateful towards Christians. So, I followed the
standard advice, broke off the conversation, deleted the thread and reported
his channel. I was ‘Billy Goat Gruff’ and I butted the TROLL off the bridge
I will add that each of my
comments was carefully crafted with love. I don’t think it mattered to him, as
each of his answers was argumentative and condemning.
As I reflect on this, it is
easy to take on the mantle of fear, but that is what he wants, so I won’t. I
reject that fear and cast it off. I think again and conclude that my writing is
having an impact.
How would you respond to a
TROLL?
How is your writing having an
impact on people?
Brendan
Conboy aka Half Man Half Poet is
the author of 16 published books including two fascinating
autobiographies, The Golden Thread and I'm Still VALUED. In
1986, Brendan invited Jesus into his life and God blessed him with the gift of
rhyming words. He used that gift as a Christian Rap artist for 25 years
and has written 6 poetry books including the entire Book of Psalms in
Rhyme. He has 3 published novels - Issues, Invasion of the
Mimics and Legacy of the Mimics. He is the creator of Book
Blest.


Brilliant Brendan. I've encountered any number of Trolls. I was listening and following this preacher on YouTube. He's a very good preacher really. And it's all Biblical and so on. Very well thought out. But it made me feel guilty and I know God doesn't do that. God convicts. But I ended up feeling guilty. There was another one I started listening to and that made me feel guilty too.
ReplyDeleteGod knows that we are sinners. He knows we have no hope without him. When we sin against him he longs for us to come back to him. He will wait every day hoping we will come back and when we do there's a party.
God doesn't impose guilt on us.
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ReplyDeleteLovely post, Brendan. Thanks. I met a TROLL on Twitter once, and he made me argue over the Trinity over several chats and pages until I came to my common sense and asked myself, Why am I arguing with a fool? Like Proverbs says, fools can never appreciate wisdom. So I will ignore them and just move on. Blessings.
ReplyDelete