social media
Social Media for modern lovers in the digital age.
The Toughest Person in the Room Might Be the Insecure
You have seen this person before. They walk into a room and immediately claim it. Their voice carries. Their laugh is loud. Their opinions arrive fully formed and rarely questioned. They seem sure of themselves. Certain. Almost untouchable.
By Eunice Kamau2 months ago in Humans
Beyond Charity: Lighting the Candle of Independence for a Widowed Mother
The Shadow of Loss In the quiet corners of our world, there are stories of resilience that often go unheard. A few weeks ago, I encountered a family whose strength left me humbled. Behind the smiles and the grateful eyes lies a story of sudden darkness. This sister, a devoted mother, saw her world collapse when her husband passed away unexpectedly. In the blink of an eye, she was left with three young children and the heavy burden of survival.
By Brain message0012 months ago in Humans
I Want To Be My Kid When I Grow Up
Twenty year old single male, living the dream, in resplendent Colorado, handsome, intelligent, geeky in a good way, well mannered, great career, kind, with integrity and great moral character seeks same in a female partner. Candidate must love, snowboarding because my second home is a slope with snow on it, music because I am amassing a collection of guitars and create my own music , and must love good food, because I am a foodie and love foods from all over the world. Please send inquiries to……
By Alexandra Grant2 months ago in Humans
The Uninvited Guest: A Tale of Second Chances and Dangerous Liaisons
College dormitories are petri dishes for secrets. When you cram six young men into a small room for four years, you think you know everything about them—their hygiene habits, their exam anxieties, and their taste in music. But sometimes, the person sleeping in the bunk next to you is living a double life that feels more like a noir film than a campus comedy.
By Elena Vance 2 months ago in Humans
Toxic Inheritance. Content Warning.
They raised her right. Kind, curious, happy. Perfect. Perfect posture. Perfect diction. Perfect silence when adults spoke. She repaid it all with gratitude and joy when gifts arrived that cost more than some lives were worth.
By Digi Dragon 05 (Or Digi or Revely)2 months ago in Humans
Who Owns Your Digital Self
Denmark is preparing legislation that assigns legal ownership of identity traits to the people who carry them. This includes the face, the voice, and the physiological patterns that algorithms can duplicate with high confidence. I have examined synthetic media cases where cloned voices triggered panic inside families and where victims struggled to prove that footage circulating online was artificial. When identity becomes copyable at industrial scale, the legal system faces problems it was never built to manage.
By Dr. Mozelle Martin2 months ago in Humans
I Don't Need My Phone... Wait, Is That Actually True?. Top Story - February 2026.
My parents gave me my first cell phone when I was twelve years old. It wasn't a fancy iPhone or anything, not even close. Just a simple black flip phone for when I needed to call or text them after school.
By Madison "Maddy" Newton2 months ago in Humans
The Department of Non Education
You are scrolling through a feed, and see a question on the top of the post. We queried one hundred college students. Out of curiosity, you want to know what they asked our young educated kids. It’s a simple question really. What year what the Declaration of Independence?
By Alexandra Grant2 months ago in Humans
What the System Forces You to Become
The Question the System Replaces By the time a person has passed through employment law, healthcare coverage rules, unemployment insurance, disability determination, and benefit eligibility, the relevant question has already shifted without ever being stated out loud. It is no longer whether the system helped or failed them. It is whether they managed to remain legible long enough to survive it. Each institutional layer imposes requirements that appear reasonable when viewed in isolation, yet become coercive when experienced sequentially:
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast2 months ago in Humans
Catching Fish
Anyone who fishes, knows, there is an art to catching fish. You need the right environment and weather, the right, bait or lure, and a bit of wisdom and finesse, in the way you cast out. It’s an art really. Not everyone can catch fish, and be good at it. Then there is the whole question of ethics.
By Alexandra Grant2 months ago in Humans
Just start by forgiving and forgetting
How many times have you heard the words forgive and forget? As far back as I can remember, my mother (God rest her soul) always talked about forgiveness that it is important because it is what our Lord and savior Jesus Christ did for those who betrayed him to be honest I have a real difficulty trying to forgive I mean it's so easy you let go of the hate you let go of the hurt that has been inside your heart your head your soul and you're able to move on I've seen people do it I've heard people talk about how they can just easily forgive those who have betrayed them I have a real difficulty trying to forgive especially those who stabbed me in the back betrayed me and figuratively speaking just left out to die. I have so many former friends that I hold so much hatred towards them, and I don't wanna hold it anymore. I try to let it go, I try to move on, but out of nowhere those memories just come back, and they ignite that fire that I thought I put out.
By stephanie borges2 months ago in Humans








