fact or fiction
Is it a fact or is it merely fiction? Fact or Fiction explores relationship myths and truths to get your head out of the clouds and back into romantic reality.
The Architect of Hours: A Story for the Keeper of Time
The world knew him as Julian Thorne, the man who never wasted a second. He was a productivity guru, a bestselling author, and the founder of "Chronos," a life-optimization system so effective it bordered on the mythical. His book, *The Architecture of Your Hours*, sat on the desks of CEOs and college students alike. His mantra was simple, brutal, and intoxicating: "Master your minutes, and your life will follow."
By noor ul amin3 months ago in Humans
The Inkwell & the Echo: A Story for the Keeper of Lost Things
The shop appeared on the corner of Elm and Third on a Tuesday, which was impossible, because on Monday, the corner had been occupied by a perpetually empty phone repair kiosk. Elias, who walked the same route to his accounting firm every day for fifteen years, noticed it immediately. He was a man of patterns, of spreadsheets and balanced ledgers, and this was an unauthorized variable.
By noor ul amin3 months ago in Humans
Ambiverts of the World, Unite!
It used to be so easy and simple: You are either an extrovert (turn toward people, love social interactions, revel in being the heart of a party, thrive in large gatherings) or an introvert (a hermit who is terrified of the social interactions and would rather spend time with a pet, book, or a good movie, turning away from others and inward the self). Extroverts are energized by other people and interactions with them, while introverts recharge on and in solitude. Well, you know the drill - this personality dimension has been carved into us since childhood.
By Lana V Lynx3 months ago in Humans
Body Mapping 3 Major Life Events to Spiritual Awakening
My entry in this challenge details 3 major life events, incorporating body mapping and decoded repeating numbers, linked to personal spiritual awakening. Divine guidance and self-interpreted occurrences highlight my soul plan and life purpose as a lightworker. To understand is to read with an open mind.
By Marilyn Glover3 months ago in Humans
The Paradox of Acceptance
What you accept disappears. Psychologist Steven C. Hayes once conducted a fascinating experiment that revealed a truth we often overlook: what truly causes pain is often not the emotion itself, but the resistance we desperately use to suppress it.
By Emily Chan - Life and love sharing3 months ago in Humans
The Broken Bridge – A Story About Never Giving Up. AI-Generated.
There was once a young man named Amir, who lived in a small mountain village cut off from the rest of the world by a wild, fast-flowing river. Every morning, villagers would stand on its edge, waiting for the current to calm so they could cross to the nearby city to buy supplies or visit family. The old wooden boats often sank, and sometimes, people never made it back.
By Dua Shehroz3 months ago in Humans
The Geometry of Waiting
I’ve always hated waiting. Not the two-minute kind of impatience when a kettle boils or a page loads, but the deep, existential kind you find in airport terminals, DMV lines, or, worst of all, a hospital lobby. It’s the time that has no clock, a duration measured only by the erosion of my own resolve. In those liminal spaces, you are stripped down to nothing but anticipation and regret. Yet, it was in the echoing, cathedral-like concourse of Grand Central Terminal, during a three-hour layover I hadn’t planned for, that I learned to appreciate its strange, quiet geometry.
By Murad Ali Shah3 months ago in Humans
The Hidden Truth About a Man’s Glow
Nobody tells you this. They’ll tell you to chase success, to build muscle, to stack paper until you finally feel enough. But no one warns you that a man can have it all — the money, the body, the cars — and still walk around dim.
By Randolphe Tanoguem3 months ago in Humans









