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Most recently published stories in Motivation.
The Japanese Art of Sacred Emptiness
THE POWER OF NOTHING In Western culture, emptiness is a problem to be solved, silence is awkward to be filled, space is wasteful to be occupied, and free time is unproductive to be scheduled, and this compulsive need to fill every gap with content, noise, activity, and stuff produces lives that are simultaneously overflowing and empty, crammed with possessions and appointments and stimulation yet devoid of the spaciousness that allows meaning to emerge, creativity to flourish, and the soul to breathe, and the Japanese aesthetic concept of ma offers a profoundly different relationship with emptiness that treats negative space not as absence but as presence, not as nothing but as the most important something, the essential element that gives meaning to everything around it by providing the contrast, context, and breathing room without which even the most beautiful things become invisible because they are crowded too close together to be seen or appreciated individually.
By The Curious Writer3 days ago in Motivation
Wabi-Sabi
Why the Cracked Bowl Is More Precious Than the Perfect One THE WESTERN OBSESSION WITH PERFECTION IS KILLING YOU Western culture has developed an obsession with perfection that permeates every aspect of modern life from the filtered photographs on social media that erase every pore and wrinkle to the corporate cultures that punish mistakes rather than learning from them to the personal development industry that frames every human limitation as a problem to be optimized away, and this relentless pursuit of flawlessness produces not excellence but rather anxiety, paralysis, and the persistent feeling that you are never good enough because perfection is by definition unattainable, meaning you have committed yourself to a goal that guarantees perpetual failure regardless of how hard you work or how much you achieve, and the Japanese aesthetic philosophy of wabi-sabi offers a radical alternative that does not just tolerate imperfection but actively celebrates it, finding beauty specifically in the irregular, the incomplete, the weathered, and the worn, and this philosophy is not mere artistic preference but a comprehensive worldview with profound implications for mental health, relationships, creativity, and the fundamental question of how to live a satisfying life in a world that is inherently imperfect and that no amount of optimization can make otherwise.
By The Curious Writer3 days ago in Motivation
Overthinking
How the Voice in Your Head Became Your Worst Enemy THE PARASITE WEARING YOUR FACE There is a voice in your head that narrates your life, evaluates your every action, predicts catastrophic futures, replays embarrassing pasts, compares you unfavorably to everyone around you, and maintains a running commentary of criticism, doubt, and fear that is so constant and so familiar you have mistaken it for yourself, for the essential voice of who you are, when in reality it is a pattern recognition system running outdated survival software that was useful when you were navigating the dangers of childhood but that has become a parasitic process consuming your mental resources and generating suffering that serves no adaptive purpose in your adult life. This voice is not you any more than the spam filter on your email is you, it is a function of your brain that evolved to identify threats and that has been hijacked by the conditions of modern life into perpetual activity because the brain cannot distinguish between real threats like physical danger and perceived threats like social evaluation, professional uncertainty, and existential anxiety, and so it processes everything as potentially dangerous and fills your consciousness with warnings about threats that are almost entirely imaginary.
By The Curious Writer3 days ago in Motivation
Emotional Intelligence
Why You Keep Choosing Pain, Drama, and Chaos Without Realizing It THE ADDICTION NOBODY DIAGNOSES Every human being has a baseline emotional state that feels like home, a default setting that your nervous system returns to regardless of external circumstances because it was established during the formative years of childhood when your brain was learning what emotions were normal and what level of activation constituted baseline reality, and this emotional home base was determined not by what was healthy or optimal but by what was most frequently experienced during the period when your neural architecture was being constructed, meaning that children who grew up in calm loving environments developed baseline states of safety and contentment while children who grew up in chaotic, stressful, or emotionally volatile environments developed baseline states of anxiety, hypervigilance, or emotional intensity that feel normal to them even though they are objectively pathological, and these baseline states persist into adulthood creating unconscious gravitational pulls toward situations, relationships, and behaviors that reproduce the familiar emotional environment regardless of whether that environment is healthy or destructive.
By The Curious Writer3 days ago in Motivation
What is a model Human Being Anyway?
Life has a funny way of taking us down different and unexpected pathways and situations which require breaking sometimes even our most heavily sacred boundaries for the sake of survival and progress. I would like to believe I am ethical in my approach to life, but i’ve admittedly had to play the bad guy more than once for my own self preservation.
By Malachai Hough3 days ago in Motivation
10 Management and Leadership Tips That Strengthen Teams and Build Better Organizations
Good managers and good leaders are often described as being two sides of the same coin. While they have the same objective, they require different skill sets and approaches to get the most out of a team. Individuals who can manage well and lead well, are those who are able to build teams and organizations that are resilient in a crisis and assured in a growth period. Most great leaders will tell you that the knowledge they gained came from experience, mistakes and learning, rather than from a book or a classroom. With that in mind, the following list of management and leadership tips are presented in a way that offer actionable advice that you can start to apply to your team today.
By Robert Susa3 days ago in Motivation
The Cat and the Path
The alley behind the apartment building had long been avoided. It was not dangerous, not in the way one might expect. No one had been mugged there, no street fights erupted, and no flickering lights signaled a hidden threat. It was merely… unwelcoming. The paint on the walls peeled in stubborn, curling strips, and the garbage bins teetered on the curb as if daring anyone to disturb them. Stray cats claimed every corner, arching their backs at intruders and hissing when challenged. Even the air smelled of damp bricks and yesterday’s refuse, a mixture of rot and rain.
By Algieba3 days ago in Motivation
Small Win - Great Rewards. A Tribute To the works of D. Alexandra Porter. Vocal creator.
The small thing which I did was read a story by D. Alexandra Porter and recommend it for a Top Story. Which she did receive. The great thing is that we became great Vocal supporters and friends.
By Novel Allen3 days ago in Motivation



