Take a moment. You built a server. You installed an operating system, configured a static IP address, and you are connecting to it from your workstation over SSH like you have been doing this for years. That is not nothing. A lot of people who call themselves web professionals have never done what you just did.
Now we need to talk about the command line.
If you have spent your career on Windows or Mac you have probably avoided the command line as long as possible. It looks austere. It offers no clues. It does not forgive typos with any grace. All of that is true and none of it matters as much as you think it does, because the command line is also the most direct conversation you will ever have with a computer. You say exactly what you mean. The computer does exactly what you said. The problems only start when what you said is not quite what you meant.
This is not an exhaustive guide to Linux. It is a survival kit — the commands you will actually use managing a dev box and building a LAMP stack. When you need something beyond this primer your AI assistant is a genuinely useful resource. Describe what you are trying to accomplish and ask for the command. That is a completely legitimate way to work.