literature
Whether written centuries ago or just last year, literary couples show that love is timeless.
Everyone Is Climbing, No One Is Arriving
The escalator moves whether you step on it or not. At the mall it hums softly beneath rows of fluorescent lights. People stand in quiet lines, carried upward in neat intervals. Some scroll through their phones. Some stare at the metal grooves beneath their shoes. Nobody questions where the escalator leads. Everyone assumes there is a floor waiting.
By Aarsh Malikabout 8 hours ago in Humans
Zodiac Compatibility Guide 2026: Which Star Signs Are Truly Meant for Each Other?
Whether you’re a die-hard astrology believer or just someone who casually checks your horoscope, zodiac compatibility remains one of the most searched relationship topics online. There’s something irresistibly fascinating about seeing how accurately our star signs describe our personalities, and even more exciting when they hint at who we might be most compatible with.
By Areeba Umairabout 23 hours ago in Humans
Between Hearts
The city wakes slowly, not with the roar of engines or the blaring horns, but with the quiet stirring of human lives. I watch from my small apartment window as people cross the streets, their footsteps a rhythm that marks the beginning of another day. Each one carries stories I will never know, lives lived in private triumphs and unseen defeats.
By Reflective Storiesa day ago in Humans
Ancient Minds, Modern Life: Lessons That Still Control You
What if most of what drives your thoughts, emotions, and behaviors today was already mapped centuries ago—not with fMRI scans or brain imaging, but through ruthless self-observation, disciplined reflection, and honesty modern psychology still struggles to achieve? Ancient philosophers and thinkers didn’t have labs, statistics, or apps tracking attention spans. Yet, they understood the mechanics of the mind with a precision that remains relevant today.
By The Curious Writer3 days ago in Humans
The Mother of the Battlefield
In the middle of a very cold and dark war many years ago there was a woman named Mary. She was born in Jamaica and she had a gift for healing people with plants and simple medicines. She had a heart that was a garden of peace and she wanted to help the soldiers who were fighting in a faraway place called the Crimea. Mary traveled all the way to London and asked the government to let her go and help the wounded men. But because of the color of her skin and her background the officials said no. They told her that she was not needed.
By Hazrat Umer3 days ago in Humans
The Captain Who Refused to Hate
In the cold and dark days of the second world war there was a man named Captain Richard. He was a brave sailor from England who was in charge of a big ship. The world was full of anger and every country was fighting against the other. In those times people were told that the person on the other side was an enemy and did not deserve any kindness. But Richard was a man of deep character and he believed that being a human was more important than being a soldier.
By Hazrat Umer4 days ago in Humans









