
Masih Ullah
Bio
I’m Masih Ullah—a bold voice in storytelling. I write to inspire, challenge, and spark thought. No filters, no fluff—just real stories with purpose. Follow me for powerful words that provoke emotion and leave a lasting impact.
Stories (52)
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Echoes of the Deep
April 10, 1912 – Southampton, England. Among the crowd bustling aboard the RMS Titanic stood Eleanor Hartley, a 23-year-old pianist with dreams larger than her modest London apartment. Her invitation to perform in New York had come like a whisper of fate. She boarded alone, her heart both heavy with farewell and fluttering with hope.
By Masih Ullah6 months ago in Lifehack
Clicks to Legends
#The Untold Story of a Digital Marketing Masterpiece It was the year 2015. In a small room in Lahore, a 25-year-old young man named Arsalan sat in front of his old laptop, typing with focus and determination. He didn’t have a corporate job, a team, or even an office. What he did have was a powerful idea, a dream, and the hunger to make something big happen in the digital world.
By Masih Ullah7 months ago in Education
THE STREETS REMEMBERED
They tore down the corner store last week—the one with the sun-bleached awning and the old bell that clanged when the door opened. I used to run there barefoot for popsicles in the summer, pennies hot in my hand. Now it’s a vacant lot, fenced off with plastic tape and silence. The city moves on, but the streets remember.
By Masih Ullah7 months ago in Fiction
The Bell Rang
My First Day of School I still remember the sound of that bell. It wasn’t just any bell—it was the sound that changed everything. My first day of school started with a mix of excitement and a strange tightness in my chest. New shoes pinched my feet, my uniform smelled like fresh laundry, and my backpack felt bigger than me.
By Masih Ullah7 months ago in Confessions
The Haunted Train and the Scary Pumpkin
The village of Chandpur was small, quiet, and surrounded by dense forests. But hidden beneath its peaceful appearance was a long-forgotten legend — the tale of Mohini, a witch so powerful and evil that the villagers had once trapped her spirit inside a cursed pumpkin and sealed it aboard an abandoned train. That train was sent into the forest and never seen again.
By Masih Ullah7 months ago in Horror
The Last Spark
The storm had arrived earlier than expected. In the village of Darwaza, nestled between silent mountains and forgotten roads, the skies had always whispered before they wept. But this time, the clouds roared with fury, and the lightning wasn’t just a flash—it was a voice.
By Masih Ullah7 months ago in Fiction
A Village’s Journey
The village of Noorabad was not on any map that mattered. Tucked deep in the dry belly of the land, it was a place time had forgotten. Cracked earth stretched for miles, the fields barren, the air thick with silence. The villagers had grown used to waiting — waiting for rain, for help, for a miracle.
By Masih Ullah7 months ago in History
Monkey Between the Bananas
In the heart of the Emerald Jungle, where the trees stretched into the clouds and the birds sang stories older than time, lived a young monkey named Momo. Momo was curious, clever, and just a little too confident for his own good. He believed he knew everything about the jungle—every vine to swing on, every tree to climb, and most importantly, every banana tree to raid.
By Masih Ullah7 months ago in Fiction
The Village That Never Forgot Her Name
Nestled between the ancient hills of southeastern Europe, where the clouds rest like soft wool on jagged peaks, lies a village untouched by time. Its name is Velika Dolina — "The Great Valley" — though no maps mark it anymore, and GPS signals fade as one nears its border.
By Masih Ullah7 months ago in History
The Bird That Waited 17 Years
Every morning she sang the same song — until the one who left finally returned. The first time the bird sang, Mara was seventeen. She had just watched her brother board a train bound for a far-off city. He had dreams she couldn’t hold, and she had roots he couldn’t wear.
By Masih Ullah7 months ago in Families











