quotes
A collection of the best quotes ever spoken by scorned lovers and hopeless romantics throughout history.
Hands That Heal
In the heart of a bustling city stood Saint Mercy Hospital, a place where miracles were expected and life was measured in charts and reports. Among the many doctors who worked there, Dr. Ayaan Malik was known as one of the finest surgeons in the entire district. His hands were precise, steady, and brilliant—able to repair hearts and lungs, to extend life when death hovered close.
By Najeeb Scholer6 months ago in Humans
The Light in Her Eyes. Content Warning. AI-Generated.
In a quiet mountain village nestled between green hills and whispering trees, lived an old woman named Amma Noor. She was known for her gentle smile, warm hands, and a heart as wide as the sky. Though her house was modest and her belongings few, Amma Noor was rich in love and compassion — and everyone in the village knew it.
By Najeeb Scholer6 months ago in Humans
"The Love That Remained". Content Warning. AI-Generated.
When the world moved on, Clara Bennett stayed behind. Not in a physical sense—she still lived in her tiny seaside home, still swept her front porch every morning, still made tea at precisely four o'clock. But inside, her heart remained anchored to a time that no longer existed. A time when laughter echoed in the halls and the smell of pine and old books filled the rooms. A time when her husband, Thomas, sat across from her each evening, reading aloud from the newspaper with his gentle baritone.
By Najeeb Scholer6 months ago in Humans
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 behaviors that are keeping you from your Dream Life
It's easy to identify the monoculture of Germany in the 1930s or America in 1776. It's clear what people at those times, in those places, accepted to be "good" and "true" even when in reality, that was certainly not always the case.
By Kristen Orkoshneli6 months ago in Humans
The Day I Stopped Apologizing for Existing
I used to say "sorry" for everything. Bumping into someone by accident“Sorry.” Speaking up in a meeting “Sorry.” Asking for help when I was overwhelmed—“Sorry.” Existing in the world, taking up space, having needs, expressing opinions? Sorry, sorry, sorry.
By Vilontinchi6 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











