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I Tried AI for One Week — and My Burnout Finally Made Sense
I didn’t turn to AI out of excitement. I turned to it because I was worn down in a way rest couldn’t fix. Not physically exhausted — mentally crowded. My mind felt like it was constantly juggling unfinished thoughts, open tabs, and half-done plans. Even when I worked all day, nothing felt settled. Everything followed me into the evening.
By Areeba Umair4 months ago in Writers
Considering The Situation V
Introduction This is just a public service announcement about the situation since I was unable to publish on the 23rd of November 2025. I am publishing this on the backup account for the reasons that I will lay out below.
By Mike Singleton 💜 Mikeydred - EBA4 months ago in Writers
Holiday Impaired Driving Is More Than a Drunk Driving Problem: Californians Need to Understand the Rising Risks
Every holiday season, California’s roads become busier, louder, and more unpredictable. Families travel long distances, social gatherings increase, and celebrations stretch late into the night. While drunk driving has long been recognized as a major holiday danger, impairment today goes far beyond alcohol. Increasingly, collisions are linked to a wider range of factors, including drug use, prescription medications, and fatigue.
By Abbasi Publisher4 months ago in Writers
Looking 4Words. Top Story - December 2025.
“Sometimes softness is what leads to change.” A quote by, well, me. Why? Because not everything has to be loud and done with a bang. While simulatenously, too much is too loud and filled with banging (of metal, bodies, heads…)
By Oneg In The Arctic4 months ago in Writers
The Psychology of Website Navigation: How Users Interpret Menus, Labels, and Structure
Understanding How Users Think When They Explore a Website Website navigation is far more than a design feature — it is a psychological experience. When users land on a site, they rely on cognitive patterns, prior knowledge, and visual cues to decide what to click next. Whether a website feels intuitive or confusing depends on how well the navigation aligns with the way people naturally process information.
By Power Marketing International4 months ago in Writers
Observations On My State Of Play With Vocal
Introduction This is about the things I see when I am going through my old Vocal publications, looking for pieces to recycle. I still cannot comment using my backup account, but I received an email and replied to it:
By Mike Singleton 💜 Mikeydred 4 months ago in Writers
Not Funny At The Time
Anne Bernays and Pamela Painter — What If? Writing Exercise for Fiction Writers prompts The Exercise — Write about something that happened to you that didn't seem at all funny at the time, for example, being stuck in a traffic jam and having a bee fly in through the car window or the time your tenant set your stove on fire and the firemen wrenched it from the wall and tossed it into the backyard. Bring the incident under the humor spotlight and transform it so as to emphasize things that will make your reader smile or laugh.Pacing is important, as are crucial details, and your own confidence that the story does not need analysis or authorial nudging. The last thing you want to do is tell the reader that you're about to lay a funny story on him. Limit: 550 words. The Objective - Because humor resides largely in what attitude you assume toward your material, you must be able to discover and exploit those elements that highlight the comic, the exaggerated, and the unlikely. Keep in mind that you could just as easily take the bee story and make it tragic (bee bites driver, driver crashes into another car, killing infant in back seat).
By Denise E Lindquist4 months ago in Writers
Happiness and Light Unofficial Challenge - The Results!
What’s a judge to do? We had so many happy, bouncy, flouncy, bibbidy boppy (Shout out to Cristal for that phrase that has remained in our grumpy brains since we read her original entry. Alas, we went with an older, more sincere one, but you should still check it out - Paul) entries that this pair of surly curmudgeons were flummoxed by Schmaltz, zest for life and woo woo so deep we had to don waders to work our way through it. And we are both stoked that 4 of you earned Top Stories (20% of entrants)! We received eighteen entries for the Optimistic phase of the challenge that were chock-a-block with rainbows, fluffy critters, and sprites. For the Sarcastic phase of the challenge, we had two entrants who gleefully brought cold hard reality down on the optimistic entries like a couple of kids playing two-fisted Wack-a-Mole.
By Paul Stewart4 months ago in Writers







