Friendship
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
Juggun Kazim responds to Alizeh Shah's accusations with public apology
In a recent development in Pakistan’s entertainment industry, veteran TV host and actor Juggan Kazim has issued a public apology to fellow actress Alizeh Shah after allegations surfaced that Kazim had mocked a past incident involving Shah. The controversy, which unfolded on social media, has sparked widespread discussion about respect, accountability, and the treatment of younger artists in the industry, highlighting the power of sincere apologies in resolving conflicts.
By Dena Falken Esq6 months ago in Confessions
Do You Unintentionally Hurt Others?
Right now, I’ve just returned from a friend’s gathering. Sitting in my dedicated office chair, I light a stick of agarwood incense. The calming scent relaxes me as I gaze out the window at the island’s late twilight. My room is dimly lit — dull and sluggish, much like my current mood. I lean back in my chair, and waves of thoughts surge in like the tide.
By Cher Che6 months ago in Confessions
The Silence Between Words. AI-Generated.
Sana had always been quiet. Not because she lacked things to say, but because she believed most things didn’t need to be said out loud. She spoke when necessary, and when she did, her words were soft, measured, and deliberate. But to the world around her—especially in the noisy classroom and social world of college—her silence was often misread.
By Asad Ullah khan 6 months ago in Confessions
The Last Text I Never Sent
We met in the most unexpected way—on a delayed train. He sat beside me with a backpack covered in band patches and a crooked smile. He asked if I liked The Smiths. I said I didn’t know who that was. He laughed and said he’d make me a playlist.
By Express Lane6 months ago in Confessions
Gaslighting Took Me
It didn’t happen all at once. There wasn’t a loud explosion, a screaming match, or a dramatic exit. No, the unraveling of who I was happened quietly, like a thread pulled from the hem of my identity. I didn’t see it then, but now I know the name for it—gaslighting. And it took me. Slowly, surely, and almost completely.
By Hamad Haider6 months ago in Confessions
The Cost of Being “The Strong One”
By Nadeem Shah “You’re so strong.” “You’ve got this.” “I don’t know how you do it all.” At first, those words feel like praise. Like you're doing something right. You’re dependable. Unshakeable. The go-to person when things fall apart. You become the listener, the fixer, the shoulder everyone cries on.
By Nadeem Shah 6 months ago in Confessions
I Exposed My Best Friend’s Wedding Secret—And She Still Doesn’t Know It Was Me
Some secrets are too dangerous to keep—especially when they could ruin someone’s life. Or in this case, their marriage. It’s been eight months since the wedding. Everyone still thinks it was perfect. Beautiful dress. Gorgeous venue. Tears during the vows. But what they don’t know is that behind the scenes, I pulled a string that nearly unraveled the whole thing.
By Elli6 months ago in Confessions









