Mahayud Din
Stories (72)
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The Secret Lives of Seconds That Nobody Ever Sees
Time never stops. It ticks, it flows, it slips quietly past us—unnoticed, unfelt, unseen. Yet, within each second, there is a hidden world, a secret life of moments that shape everything without anyone realizing. This is the story of one such second.
By Mahayud Din7 months ago in Confessions
When the Silence Screams: A Tale of Hidden Truths and Dark Lies
Detective Mara Ellis stared at the photograph pinned to the corkboard, the edges curling with age and neglect. It showed a smiling woman, vibrant and alive — a stark contrast to the cold, empty eyes of the victim in the autopsy report she had just read. The woman’s name was Evelyn Shaw. She had disappeared five years ago, presumed dead, but her body had never been found. Until now.
By Mahayud Din7 months ago in Psyche
Making Small Talk Big: My Journey to a More Social Life
For as long as I can remember, social situations made me feel like I was walking into a room full of invisible walls. People chatted effortlessly around me—about the weather, sports, weekend plans—but my mind would go blank. I’d practice lines in my head, trying to sound “normal,” only to mumble something awkward or just laugh at the wrong time. I wasn’t shy exactly—I wanted to connect—but small talk felt like a foreign language everyone else had mastered.
By Mahayud Din7 months ago in Confessions
Sleeping With the Snorer: A Love Story
I didn’t know what I was truly committing to when I said “I do.” Sure, I knew about his love for barbecue, his inability to fold laundry properly, and the way he always left the cupboard doors open like a raccoon had ransacked the kitchen. But I had no idea I was marrying a human chainsaw.
By Mahayud Din7 months ago in Families
Living with My Husband: A Comedy of Errors and Love
Marriage, they say, is a journey—a beautiful, sometimes bumpy journey filled with love, learning, and a lot of unexpected surprises. But what they don’t always tell you is how much of that journey looks like a slapstick comedy. And let me tell you, living with my husband is nothing short of a daily sitcom.
By Mahayud Din7 months ago in Fiction
Breaking Down and Leveling Up: Crying, Laughing, and Cry-Laughing
Life doesn’t come with an instruction manual, and if it did, I’m pretty sure mine got lost somewhere between the “Stay Calm” chapter and the “You’ve Got This” appendix. There have been moments when I felt like I was breaking down in slow motion—a messy, emotional unraveling that seemed to come out of nowhere and take hold like a tornado in my chest. But, weirdly enough, those moments also turned out to be the times I leveled up in ways I never expected.
By Mahayud Din7 months ago in Journal
From Panic to Peace: My Journey Back to Myself
There was a time when I couldn’t make it through a morning without feeling like I was drowning. Not in water, but in thoughts—sharp, spiraling, suffocating thoughts. It began subtly, almost quietly, like a whisper at the edge of my mind. I brushed it off at first. “Everyone gets stressed,” I told myself. But this wasn’t stress. It was fear, coiled tightly around my chest like a snake. It was panic that came without warning and stayed without mercy.
By Mahayud Din7 months ago in Longevity
Beneath the Surface: Living with Fear During Life’s Hardest Moments
Beneath the Surface: Living with Fear During Life’s Hardest Moments I used to think fear came in loud bursts—screams in the night, the slam of a door, the chaos of a car crash. I thought anxiety was a shaking hand or a racing heart right before a speech or a test. But I learned the truth in silence. I learned that fear can be quiet and persistent, like water leaking beneath the floorboards—unseen, but powerful enough to drown you slowly.
By Mahayud Din7 months ago in Confessions
Wandering Through the World for One Happy Moment
Meera stood at the airport gate, her passport in hand and her heart heavy. Behind her were years of quiet sacrifice — for family, for marriage, for work. On the outside, she was doing fine: married at 24, a mother by 26, a part-time teacher who balanced home and duty with grace. But deep inside, she felt like a traveler who had stayed too long at one station.
By Mahayud Din7 months ago in Motivation
Smart Risk, Big Reward: The 21st Century Billionaire’s Path
The rain was relentless, pounding against the glass windows of the modest apartment where Elena Martinez sat, laptop open, eyes fixed on lines of code scrolling faster than her tired mind could keep up with. Outside, the city hummed with the usual chaos — taxis honking, street vendors shouting, people rushing to their destinations. But inside, the world was quiet except for the steady tapping of her fingers on the keyboard.
By Mahayud Din7 months ago in Futurism











