family
Family unites us; but it's also a challenge. All about fighting to stay together, and loving every moment of it.
(Part 1) The Nature of Faithfulness: Why Men and Women Fail Differently and Love the Same
Every man and woman desires love, but they do not experience love in the same way. The human heart is one, yet the human mind is divided by design. Men and women think, feel, and attach differently. That difference is not a flaw in nature. It is a pattern that reflects purpose. Ignoring it does not create equality. It only breeds resentment.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast3 months ago in Humans
(Conclusion) The Collapse of Duty: Reclaiming the Moral Order Between Men and Women
Every empire believes it will last forever. Every culture believes it can defy the laws that brought it into being. Yet the law of God is not subject to human approval. It is written into the very fabric of creation. Truth does not fade when nations fall. It remains, waiting for men and women humble enough to return to it.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast3 months ago in Humans
(Part 6) The Collapse of Duty: Reclaiming the Moral Order Between Men and Women
The strength of a nation is not measured by its armies or its wealth. It is measured by the integrity of its people. A civilization does not fall when enemies invade from without, but when corruption rots it from within. The weight of civilization rests not on governments, but on homes. And the weight of the home rests on the hearts of men and women who either honor truth or abandon it.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast3 months ago in Humans
(Part 5) The Collapse of Duty: Reclaiming the Moral Order Between Men and Women
Every collapse begins in the heart. Every restoration begins there too. The world has tried to rebuild itself through politics, technology, and revolution, but none of those can heal what is broken in the human soul. No law can teach humility. No government can legislate love. The only power that can restore what pride has destroyed is self-sacrifice.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast3 months ago in Humans
(Part 4) The Collapse of Duty: Reclaiming the Moral Order Between Men and Women
Civilizations rarely fall from one great blow. They fade when people stop carrying the weight of duty. Decline begins when strength gives way to softness and when comfort becomes a higher goal than character.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast3 months ago in Humans
(Part 3) The Collapse of Duty: Reclaiming the Moral Order Between Men and Women
Every law is a teacher. It tells a people what their society values. It rewards some behavior and punishes others. It shapes the moral direction of the nation, whether its authors admit it or not. When the law rewards righteousness, virtue flourishes. When it rewards corruption, virtue dies.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast3 months ago in Humans
(Part 2) The Collapse of Duty: Reclaiming the Moral Order Between Men and Women
Marriage is not a contract of convenience. It is a covenant of reverence. It rests on one simple truth: a man’s honor and a woman’s respect are bound together. Remove one, and the other will fall. A husband who is not respected cannot lead, and a wife who is not honored cannot trust.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast3 months ago in Humans
(Part 1) The Collapse of Duty: Reclaiming the Moral Order Between Men and Women
For most of human history, marriage was not a lifestyle choice. It was a moral covenant. It bound man and woman to something higher than themselves, forming the foundation of family, community, and civilization. The vows were not about feelings, but about faithfulness. They were not written to protect comfort, but to produce character. And yet today, we live in a world where marriage has been emptied of its meaning, turned into a contract of convenience that can be broken “regardless of fault.”
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast3 months ago in Humans
The Quiet Things We Never Say
The rain had been falling steadily for hours, the kind of rain that didn’t cleanse anything; it only lingered, turning the streets into rivers and the world into a blurred painting. Elena pressed her hands to the cold glass of her apartment window, watching the city lights stretch and smear like watercolor. Somewhere below, a car horn cried out, and somewhere else, laughter echoed. The world moved, but she didn’t. She stayed still, suspended in the quiet storm, as though waiting for something she couldn’t name.
By Shahab Khan3 months ago in Humans
Insecure in a Relationship? Here’s How to Break the Cycle
Insecurity can silently erode even the strongest of relationships. It sneaks in through doubt, fear, and comparison, leaving behind emotional chaos and distance. If you constantly find yourself questioning your partner’s love, fearing rejection, or needing reassurance, you’re not alone. The truth is, relationship insecurity is more common than we think—and it can be overcome with awareness, effort, and emotional healing.
By Bloom Boldly3 months ago in Humans
The Notebook I Left Behind
The mountains around Buner in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (Pakistan) always felt huge, like they were shouting at the sky. Back in the 2000s, everything else was shouting too—guns, rumors, news on scratchy radios. Good guys, bad guys? Impossible to tell. My village felt like the edge of a war map. But I had two things nobody could take: a short pencil that kept snapping and a beat-up notebook with pages falling out. They weren’t for fighting the outside mess. They were for the mess inside my head.
By Zeeshan Ali3 months ago in Humans


