science
The Science Behind Relationships; Humans Media explores the basis of our attraction, contempt, why we do what we do and to whom we do it.
Looks, Brains & Boundary Lines: Unpacking Modern Attraction and Dating Trends for 2025
Not long ago, my best friend called, upset after a disastrous first date. She ranted about mismatched text vibes, awkward jokes, and an overall sense that, despite his good looks, something vital was missing. It’s a story I’ve heard too often lately: in 2025, finding the right match feels much more complicated than judging someone’s face or confidence from across the room—yet we can’t pretend looks don’t matter at all. As dating apps, scientific research, and cultural winds all play tug-of-war with our hearts, what actually attracts us these days? And are we finally ready to admit it’s not just about a symmetrical jawline? Let’s pull back the curtain on modern attraction and dating trends—quirks, contradictions, and all.
By Abdus Salam Khan7 months ago in Humans
Burnout Made Me Rebuild My Entire Life—And I’m Glad It Did
Burnout Made Me Rebuild My Entire Life—And I’m Glad It Did Let me take you back to a morning that broke me. It was a Tuesday. Nothing special. The alarm went off at 6:30 a.m., like it always did. I had an inbox full of emails, a calendar stacked with Zoom calls, and three deadlines breathing down my neck.
By hammad khan7 months ago in Humans
Forever with mummy. Content Warning.
Last time I was writing about corpses giving birth. I thought I will not come across anything more bizarre but here it is! Apparently, women's body can keep the fetus if unable to deliver! As if the child bearing itself was not scary enough, nature decided to be ECO and recycle.
By Joanna Golczynska7 months ago in Humans
Starmer faces growing Labour rebellion over welfare cuts
Starmer is confronted with a growing labor revolt over welfare cuts. Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer is facing increasing pressure from within his own party as a growing number of Labour MPs voice opposition to his stance on welfare cuts. Within a few weeks of Labour's historic victory in the general election, the internal rebellion has revealed deep divisions within the party. Starmer's decision to maintain some welfare restrictions imposed by the previous Conservative government, particularly the two-child benefit cap, is at the heart of the dissent. Despite pre-election hopes that a Labour government would reverse the policy—seen by critics as punitive and harmful to low-income families—Starmer has signalled there will be no immediate change.
By GLOBAL NEWS7 months ago in Humans
Can Humans Generate Water?
✦ Introduction: The Tear We Forgot Water is more than H₂O. It’s a living poem, an ancient whisper, a divine signature on the parchment of Earth. It runs through rivers, veins, and dreams. But what if we lost it all? Could humans—masters of machines, marvels of modernity—generate what the heavens once gifted for free?
By Muhammad Abdullah7 months ago in Humans
Fable of Waterless Earth
In a future not so far, nor too near, Earth stood still. It did not spin, not metaphorically, not spiritually, not even emotionally. It gasped beneath the weight of its own drought. The rivers had forgotten how to flow, the seas had lost their blue to a ghostly gray, and clouds, once white ballerinas of the sky, now hovered as burnt ashes, scattering soot, not showers.
By Muhammad Abdullah7 months ago in Humans
Eye-Opening Video Reveals How Your Body Reacts To A 36-Hour Fast
Ever wondered what actually happens when you stop eating for 36 hours? It’s not just about skipping meals or losing weight—your body goes through a wild biological rollercoaster that could change how you think about food, energy, and even healing.
By Md Fahad Alam7 months ago in Humans
Soulmates — A Journey Through Time, Spirit, and Science
We all crave that deep, unshakable connection — the feeling that someone, somewhere, was made just for us. The idea of a soulmate is one of the most powerful romantic ideals in human history. It has shaped poetry, inspired spiritual quests, and given comfort to the lonely. But what does the term really mean? Is it fate or fantasy? Science or spirit? Or maybe... all of it at once?
By F. M. Rayaan7 months ago in Humans
To maintain your memories in sequence, the human brain employs a storage technique.
For decades, researchers have been baffled by the brain's memory storage mechanism. How our minds can store new knowledge without erasing what we already know has long been a mystery. Following a thorough examination, scientists have discovered that place cells contain crucial hints about this process.
By Francis Dami7 months ago in Humans
The First Time We Breathe
I don’t remember the first time I breathed. No one does. Yet somehow, it defined everything that followed. That first cry wasn’t just air filling lungs—it was existence announcing itself. And from that moment onward, every “first time” became a thread in the tapestry of being human. We stumble, we reach, we burn, we break—and we become.
By Muhammad Abdullah7 months ago in Humans










