humanity
For better or for worse, relationships reveal the core of the human condition.
Cages of Comfort
As a whole, we as people keep letting others decide our place in the world. I feel as I get older myself I see this happen more and more often. We stopped dreaming, we stopped making our way in the world as we see it and have fallen victim to the monotonous work, media and time loop of life. It’s terrifying to me how many people have stopped trying to create something of their own. We all fall victim to this lack of life at some time, and yet we let it keep happening to the younger generations too.
By Kylie Hunnel2 months ago in Humans
The Invisible Shield: Why a Mother’s Love is the World’s Greatest Power
By Hazrat Umer In the rush of our lives, we often forget the person who was there before we even took our first breath. We celebrate big heroes in movies and books, but the real heroes are often sitting quietly in our homes, praying for us while we sleep. In my fifteen years of watching people succeed and fail, I have noticed a secret pattern. Those who have the most peace in their lives are often those who have the shade of their mother’s prayers over their heads.
By Hazrat Umer2 months ago in Humans
Libra Woman & Libra Man Compatibility Score. AI-Generated.
When a Libra woman meets a Libra man, the attraction is almost instant. Both are ruled by Venus — the planet of love, beauty, charm, and partnership. This pairing often feels like meeting someone who already understands you before words are even spoken. Their energy is elegant, polite, romantic, and emotionally refined.
By Inspire and Fun2 months ago in Humans
Power, Protection, and the Limits of Liberal Ideology
The Epstein saga didn’t happen in a vacuum. It happened inside a specific ideological architecture — one built on liberal principles of individual freedom, institutional trust, legal process, and market logic. Understanding how that architecture both enabled the abuse and is now struggling to reckon with it tells us something important about liberalism itself: its genuine achievements, and its profound blind spots.
By noor ul amin2 months ago in Humans
Signal and Structure
Modern systems rarely collapse from dramatic failure. They erode when perception distorts and standards shift without acknowledgment. This series examines the quiet mechanics of stability — how clarity sharpens perception and how consistency reinforces trust. What holds structures together is rarely visible, but when it disappears, everything feels unstable.
By Flower InBloom2 months ago in Humans
Before the Cracks Show
Most systems do not fail suddenly. They fail quietly, registering first as friction rather than fracture. Some people sense that shift before it becomes visible — not through prophecy, but through pattern recognition. This series examines what happens when early perception meets cultural infrastructure that refuses to adjust. It asks whether the problem is sensitivity — or a system that only responds to collapse.
By Flower InBloom2 months ago in Humans







