review
Reviews of relationship guides and the ever-changing love landscape.
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 Grant23 days ago in Humans
My mind
My mind is controversial, I can think opposite things at the same time, and I can have thoughts that I have never asked or even created. I mean, I don't control them. It's a hole, too deep, immeasurable. Like the stars in the universe, the planets, and galaxies, we see only what we are capable of seeing. Today is 10, tomorrow is 1000 and so on. But there is more, there is always more, and it is not a good thing to try to find out, cuz its like a spiral, you could end up being swallowed by it if you keep digging.
By Jokeny Martins23 days ago in Humans
Gen Z Is No Longer Getting their Driver’s License
For decades, learning how to drive was a rite of passage. Turning 16 meant freedom, independence, and your first taste of adulthood behind the wheel. But something has shifted. A growing number of young people — especially Gen Z — are delaying getting their driver’s licenses or skipping it entirely. Instead, they’re tapping a screen, booking an Uber, and letting someone else handle the road.
By AnthonyBTV24 days ago in Humans
Who Is Sanae Takaichi?
Sanae Takaichi is the first female Prime Minister of Japan, having taken office on October 21, 2025, and subsequently securing a landslide victory in a snap election on February 8, 2026. As a high-ranking member of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), she is recognized as a staunch conservative and a security hawk, often referred to as a protege of the late former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.
By Omasanjuwa Ogharandukun24 days ago in Humans
Beyond Epstein
I didn’t know how to stop watching the news. It started as a quick scroll—just a check-in, like I was being responsible. Then it became a kind of hunger. A need to see the latest twist, the latest headline, the latest detail that made my stomach twist into knots.
By John Smith26 days ago in Humans
Celebrity Deaths of 2026 And Why the World Is Paying Attention, Remembering, and Reflecting
Some news stops you mid-scroll. Not because it’s shocking—but because it feels personal. In 2026, an ongoing list of celebrity deaths has continued to trend across Google searches, news platforms, and social media timelines worldwide. Each announcement ripples through the internet like a sudden hush in a crowded room. Fans pause. Tributes appear. Old interviews resurface. Songs, films, and performances are replayed as if memory itself is pressing rewind.
By Omasanjuwa Ogharandukun27 days ago in Humans
After the End
What living inside the Book of Revelation for seven years revealed about empire, endurance, and Christian complicity I didn’t begin a PhD in the UK because I wanted to be reshaped. I began it because I wanted to master something that was already causing me spiritual and existential discomfort.
By SUEDE the poet28 days ago in Humans
DEFUND ICE
🌟 THE STORY: “NOT ANOTHER FAMILY LIVING IN FEAR” They always say you remember the sound more than anything else — the sound of a moment that changes everything. For some people, it’s the slam of a door. For others, it’s the tone of a phone call. For me, it was the frantic pounding on my neighbor’s window at 3 a.m., the kind of pounding that carries fear inside it, the kind that tells you something is wrong long before you understand what it is.
By Organic Products 29 days ago in Humans








