science
The Science Behind Relationships; Humans Media explores the basis of our attraction, contempt, why we do what we do and to whom we do it.
The Different Love Languages. AI-Generated.
Love is one of the most powerful human experiences, yet it can also be one of the most misunderstood. Many relationships struggle not because love is absent, but because it is expressed in ways that the other person doesn’t fully receive or recognize. This is where the concept of “love languages” becomes incredibly valuable. Understanding love languages allows you to communicate care, appreciation, and affection in a way that truly resonates with your partner, friend, or even family member.
By Timothy A Rowlandabout 9 hours ago in Humans
🌍 Qeshm Island, Strait of Hormuz & Global Tension
In today’s world, one small region has suddenly become the center of global attention — the Strait of Hormuz and nearby Qeshm (Chashm) Island in Iran. What looks like a normal island on a map is actually one of the most powerful strategic locations on Earth.
By LegacyWords2 days ago in Humans
Time
Ugh, that time of year again. Twice a year I dread these tow days. It creates upheaval and my body, as I get older, doesn’t approve. I don’t even know we are forced to hold on to something created during war time for wartime. Like any other government unposed tax, entitlement, or rule of law, once created and implemented, it’s a done deal. We are stuck with its misery. I’d rather they add a couple hours to everyday, so I can get everything I do, done, without pressure.
By Alexandra Grant4 days ago in Humans
Global Innovation Networks
In today’s fast-changing global economy, innovation has become the foundation of long-term business success. Companies are no longer relying solely on internal research or isolated strategies. Instead, they are turning toward global collaboration, shared intelligence, and cross-industry partnerships to stay competitive.
By Backlinks Cart5 days ago in Humans
Knuckle-Draggers in Armani
Tonight, the air is thick with the smell of digital decay and expensive perfume. I’m sitting here, staring at my Amazon Prime home screen as it vomits ads for the Academy Awards—a shimmering, hollow ritual where the world’s most beautiful primates gather to hand each other golden idols for being "human" on camera. On another tab, I’ve got the Governor’s Ball in Arkansas, where Erika Kirk is leaking crocodile tears like a broken faucet, pleading for the "oppression" of the white male with all the sincerity of a used car salesman in a Category 5 hurricane.And then there’s the news.
By Meko James 6 days ago in Humans
AL-Alaq
Man does not begin from himself… he arrives late, as if something had already been unfolding before him, quietly, beyond his reach, until it gathered enough to appear as a beginning, while it was only a continuation of what had never been named. And there, in that unstable threshold, something almost imperceptible holds together—just enough—and what emerges is not a thing, but a delicate mistake: an entity.
By LUCCIAN LAYTH6 days ago in Humans
Why 115 Years May Be Our Natural Ceiling
For centuries, humans have been fascinated by the idea of living longer—perhaps even indefinitely. Advances in medicine, nutrition, and technology have significantly increased average life expectancy across the globe. Yet, despite these improvements, scientists increasingly suggest that there may be a natural upper limit to how long humans can live. Many studies point toward approximately 115 years as the maximum lifespan most humans can realistically achieve.
By Irshad Abbasi 7 days ago in Humans
Enslaved
You can’t run. You can’t hide. You can’t win. You can’t live without me. You can’t be free of me. I own you. We own you. What do we think about that? Hard pass right? No matter whatever ‘that’ is, it’s a no go. I agree, yet every one of us is a slave. We are bought and sold by an entity, that has managed to have something we all need. They dangle it over our heads, but you never actually get the reward. They do. All of it.
By Alexandra Grant7 days ago in Humans








