art
The best relationship art depicts the highs and lows of the authentic couple.
Exploring Heaven and Hell Across Cultures
Every culture has wrestled with the same mystery: what happens when we die? Across time and continents, humans have created vivid concepts of paradise and punishment—heaven and hell—to explain the unknown. Though names, imagery, and doctrines differ, the core ideas remain strikingly similar: a reward for the good, and a reckoning for the wicked.
By Kristen Orkoshneli6 months ago in Humans
Your Brain Can’t Feel Pain — So Why Do Headaches Hurt?
The Brain Doesn’t Feel Pain – But Why Do We? 🤯🧠 Have you ever bumped your head so hard that it made you dizzy? Or felt a throbbing headache that made you want to crawl into bed and hide from the world?
By Leya kirsan official 6 months ago in Humans
A Night in the Wild
It was supposed to be a simple getaway—just me and my boyfriend, a tent, and a weekend away from the chaos of everyday life. We drove far out of the city, deep into the wilderness, until the roads turned to gravel and the trees grew so thick they nearly touched above our heads. We were completely off the grid. No phone signal. No lights. Just nature, and us.
By Solene Hart6 months ago in Humans
Valeria Altobelli: The Powerhouse Behind Art, Advocacy, and Academia
Valeria Altobelli's story reads like a polished saga of boundless talent, legal intellect, artistic innovation, and dedicated activism. The Italian-born polymath has cultivated a multidimensional career that seamlessly fuses music, law, broadcasting, international relations, and philanthropic leadership. From the age of six, Valeria immersed herself in the classical arts—piano, guitar, percussion, solfeggio, opera singing, and theater. Her early artistic education included a stint at an experimental classical high school and numerous successes in Latin-language competitions like the Ciceronianum, where she still serves as an ambassador today. At 23, she graduated with honors in Legal Sciences and earned a Master's degree in Law, focusing on copyright. This experimental thesis underscored her forward-thinking approach to intellectual property. Soon after, she completed a Master's in International Relations and Diplomatic Training at Rome's SIOI School, before finishing her notary practice in Naples through the prestigious Genghini training school. Fluent in Italian, English, French, Spanish, and Portuguese, Valeria's multicultural fluency has been a key asset throughout her global education, media, and humanitarian work. Since 2013, Valeria has been an engaging presence on Italy's most watched networks—above all, RAI and Mediaset—anchoring flagship shows like Forum, La domenica sportiva, Tale e quale show, and Telethon marathons. Her acting credits include Tiramisù (2016), 4 Misteri e un funerale (2021), and Maledetta Primavera (2023), where she also wrote and produced the soundtrack.
By Nadeem Mirani6 months ago in Humans
How Islam Changed My View of Success.
Success is a word that carries different meanings for different people. For many years, I believed success was all about wealth, status, power, and worldly achievements. I thought the more money I had, the more luxurious my life became, and the more people admired me, the more successful I would be. I spent a lot of time chasing these goals, constantly comparing myself to others and feeling like I wasn’t doing enough. But when I truly began to understand Islam, my entire view of success changed.
By Tariq jamil6 months ago in Humans
How Crypto Changed More Than My Wallet
How Crypto Changed More Than My Wallet I never intended to become a cryptocurrency believer. If you asked me five years ago what I thought about “crypto,” I would have shrugged and said, “Sounds like internet money for geeks.”
By waseem khan6 months ago in Humans
The Strong One Is Suffering
They call me the strong one. The reliable one. The one you go to when your life is falling apart, when you need advice at midnight, when you're on the edge and need someone to talk you down. I’ve worn that label like armor for years—believing it meant I was valuable, needed, even loved.
By Nadeem Shah 6 months ago in Humans
A Father’s Unseen Struggle
In a small dusty village far from the busy cities and bright lights lived a poor man named Ahmed. He was a laborer, a man whose hands told the story of a life filled with hardship. His skin was rough, his clothes worn and faded, but his heart was full of hope and love. Ahmed’s entire world revolved around one person his only daughter Amina.
By khalid khan6 months ago in Humans
The Human Finger. A Marvel of Nature and a Mark of Identity.
Structure of the Finger Each hand has five fingers: the thumb, index finger, middle finger, ring finger, and little finger (or pinky). Though we commonly refer to them as "fingers," the thumb is technically different in structure and movement. Each finger is made of three bones called phalanges (except the thumb, which has two). These bones are connected by joints and powered by tendons, muscles, and nerves that allow precise movement.
By Tariq jamil6 months ago in Humans











