Stella Johnson Love
Bio
✈️ Stella Johnson | Pilot
📍 Houston, TX
👩✈️ 3,500+ hours in the sky
🌎 Global traveler | Sky is my office
💪 Breaking barriers, one flight at a time
📸 Layovers & life at 35,000 ft
Stories (145)
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This 5-Minute Routine Can Improve Your Life Forever
When we hear the phrase personal growth, we picture grand gestures that devour time we don’t always have. Yet the spark of genuine change often arrives in the quietest of gestures. A daily five-minute habit might seem trivial, yet it can reroute your mindset, lift your mood, and guide your decisions. The brain thrives on repeated exposure, and five minutes is the sweet spot—long enough to matter, brief enough to fit.
By Stella Johnson Love5 months ago in Longevity
Become Who You Want to Be in Just 30 Days
Most folks brush off the power of a single month. Thirty days can feel fleeting, yet it’s spacious enough for momentum to build, for self-defeating loops to crack, and for a sturdier you to rise. Showing up daily for a month you don’t slide into half measures. You melt the old grooves, clear the mental fog, and polish the truth that you matter. No magic lightning bolt—just the slow, steady stacking of daily wins.
By Stella Johnson Love5 months ago in Motivation
How to Rewire Your Brain for Confidence and Success. AI-Generated.
Confidence isn’t just a personality trait—it’s a skill shaped by repeated thought patterns and experiences. Thanks to neuroplasticity, the brain has the incredible ability to rewire itself based on how you think and what you focus on. When you repeatedly engage in self-affirming behaviors or challenge limiting beliefs, your brain adapts. Neural pathways that once supported fear and self-doubt can be restructured to foster courage, clarity, and positive action.
By Stella Johnson Love5 months ago in Motivation
How Women Over 35 Are Changing the Dating Game. AI-Generated.
Women over thirty-five are no longer dating primarily to meet external expectations; they are dating to affirm their own desires. This change is quietly but powerfully reworking expectations for romance in every age cohort. After years of building careers, traveling widely, nurturing children, or simply learning to inhabit their own histories, many women in this group arrive at dating with an unmistakable sense of identity and an unambiguous list of what they seek.
By Stella Johnson Love6 months ago in Families
How to Attract High-Quality Matches Without Chasing
Chasing may seem like it's showing you care, but it usually leads to emotional burnout and a lopsided vibe. When you go after someone too hard, you might accidentally seem needy or desperate, even if you really do mean well. And that kind of energy can push away emotionally healthy people who want a calm, back-and-forth vibe.
By Stella Johnson Love6 months ago in Men
Swiping Fatigue? Here’s How to Make Dating Exciting Again
Online dating was meant to make romance easier, but for many, it’s become a draining chore. What once felt full of potential has turned into a repetitive cycle of left and right swipes with very few meaningful results. This leads to emotional fatigue, where matches blur together and excitement fades. The promise of instant connection has given way to shallow interactions and mental overload.
By Stella Johnson Love6 months ago in Journal
Dating in Your 30s vs. Your 20s: What Really Changes?
Dating in your 20s usually feels like a road trip without a map. You’re trying out different styles of music, pit stops, and snacks to see what sticks, and you’re okay if a few snacks spill. Relationships are often low-pressure experiments. Maybe you date someone for a few weeks and learn that you like them, then you don’t, and that’s cool. Every casual date, one-night stand, and sometimes awkward situation feels like a lesson, not a mistake.
By Stella Johnson Love6 months ago in Futurism
The #1 Mistake Everyone Makes on Their Dating Profile
Your dating profile is pretty much your first date on the Internet. For a lot of people, it's the only peek they get before deciding to hit message or swipe left for good. It matters a lot, but too many folks race through it, thinking it’s just a box to check instead of a little window into their real self. That kinda rush can mess up your shot before you even get to say hi.
By Stella Johnson Love6 months ago in Filthy
Why Modern Dating Feels So Hard—And How to Fix It
Dating apps have totally changed how we meet people, but all those choices can turn into too many choices. With an endless stream of possible dates, it’s super easy to think that the next swipe might find someone even cooler. Because of that, people hold back from getting serious, scared they’ll find someone “better” if they keep looking.
By Stella Johnson Love6 months ago in Humans
Peer Support for Divorced Moms and Teen Girls
Divorce can feel like a quiet kind of loneliness, especially for mothers and their teenage daughters, both trying to cope with losses that change everything. For mothers, the marriage’s end can mean sudden solitude, bills that don’t add up, and the nagging belief that they didn’t hold it together. Daughters usually face a more internal storm: disappointment, sudden anger, and the painful sense that someone stepped out of the picture. While the feelings come from the same breakup, they land on different parts of daily life and can feel equally heavy. Finding circles of other moms and other teen girls lets both generations hear their own experience echoed back, so they know they aren’t the only ones carrying it.
By Stella Johnson Love6 months ago in Confessions
Healing the Mother-Daughter Relationship After Divorce
Divorce does more than dissolve a marriage; it ripples through the entire family system, with the mother-daughter bond often carrying the biggest waves. Once marked by shared secrets, late-night talks, and easy laughter, the relationship can suddenly tilt. Mothers and daughters process loss, shame, and anxiety in opposite rooms; the daughter hides her worry behind closed doors, while the mother spills hers into late-night scrolling. The space between them grows, not from a lack of love, but from a lack of shared words. Tiny flares of miscommunication pile up—loud silences, interrupted phone calls, unanswered texts—until the once-familiar comfort feels brittle and strange.
By Stella Johnson Love6 months ago in Humans
What If My Daughter Blames Me for the Divorce?
Divorce lands squarely on children’s hearts, scattering hurt and confusion while they search for certainty and for someone to name as the source of the hurt. When your daughter turns that finger of blame on you, it feels like a fresh wound—especially when your own heart feels justified, even relieved, by the choice you made. Yet her blame carries the weight of her fear and her disrupted sense of belonging, not an accurate reflection of who is right. Kids tend to translate the adult world so that the fault can be traced and the world feels steady again, even if that costs them the parent they once felt safe with. If you can step inside that emotional landscape, you can begin to build the bridge back to her.
By Stella Johnson Love6 months ago in Humans











