travel
The ultimate test of a compatible relationship is whether you can stand to travel together.
The Truth About Woman’s Anger: It’s Not Madness
Nobody tells you this, but a woman’s anger is rarely about what she says. You hear the sharp tone, the sudden silence, the edge in her words — and you assume it’s about the argument in front of you. It almost never is. Because nine times out of ten, woman’s anger is not rooted in logic. It’s rooted in deprivation. Starvation. A body aching for touch, a heart aching to be seen, a soul aching to feel chosen by her man — not any man.
By Randolphe Tanoguem3 months ago in Humans
The Torenza Passport Mystery: The Woman from a Country That Doesn’t Exist
Have you ever heard a story so strange that it makes you question what’s real and what’s not? That’s exactly what happened when the internet exploded with videos and posts about **“The Torenza Woman.”** The story claimed that a woman arrived at **JFK Airport in New York** carrying a **passport from a country called Torenza** — a nation that doesn’t appear on any map. The moment she handed over her passport, immigration officers were shocked. According to viral posts, the passport looked real, with holograms, stamps, and a digital chip, but when the officers searched for “Torenza,” no such country existed anywhere in the world. The woman supposedly looked confused and said something unbelievable: *“Then this isn’t my world.”* That single line turned a normal day at the airport into a mystery that spread across the internet like wildfire.
By Kashif Wazir3 months ago in Humans
just like i wanted
chapter6 just like i wanted "it isn't what you think!" i protest. it's obvious to me that Carter thinks i'm rejecting a part of him. and it makes sense that he would feel spurned and judged when i distance from his habit. honestly, there isn’t another way to interpret my dissociation from his perspective, but it is the intention and motive for my pushback that i wish to give my personal definition to.
By ⸘jason alan‽3 months ago in Humans
The American Dream of Homeownership Has Aged (Literally)
A new report from the National Association of Realtors shows the median age of U.S. homebuyers has climbed to 56 in 2024, the oldest on record — up from 31 in 1981. For first-time buyers, the median age has risen from 29 to 38, reflecting how much harder it’s become to buy a home early in life. This 25-year jump marks a fundamental shift in affordability and access. Median home prices have surged to roughly $420,000, while the median household income is about $79,000 — far below the $110,000+ estimated to comfortably afford that home at current mortgage rates of 7–8%. In 1981, a typical home cost about three times the average household income; today, it’s closer to five-and-a-half times, and much higher in many metro areas.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast3 months ago in Humans
Global Sumud Flotilla: When Humanity Sails for Gaza
The Global Sumud Flotilla is a recent international humanitarian effort aimed at delivering relief supplies to Gaza and drawing attention to the severe humanitarian crisis affecting its population. More than just delivering aid, this flotilla represents global solidarity, moral responsibility, and the resolve of ordinary people to act when others remain silent.
By Javed Khan 3 months ago in Humans
Jumper to it
Roughly once a year the" reaching for the jumper " ritual begins. It lives in the darkest recess of my wardrobe. I have owned it for around 20 years but would guess 36 days in that time I have worn it. I have calculated this as there have to be very special conditions for wearing it.
By ASHLEY SMITH3 months ago in Humans
The Future Without Smartphones
The Future Without Smartphones Imagine a morning without your phone. No alarm, no notifications, no quick scroll through WhatsApp or Instagram. The silence feels heavy at first — unfamiliar, almost strange. You reach for a device that isn’t there. Suddenly, you notice the sunlight on the wall, the sound of real birds instead of digital chimes.
By Wings of Time 3 months ago in Humans
Traveling Traditions
Winter always arrives with a honey-do list. Get boxes down from the attic. Bust out matching flannel pajamas. Ending the night with special mugs clinking with hot chocolate and too much whipped cream. There's the obligatory watching of that one movie—yes, that one—and the panicked, last-minute wrapping of presents under a tree that's been slowly shedding needles since Thanksgiving.
By Tennessee Garbage3 months ago in Humans
How Navigation Changed More Than Just Travel. AI-Generated.
1. The Day We Stopped Being Lost There was a time when getting lost was a daily part of human life — a farmer missing a familiar trail, a sailor misreading the stars, a traveler relying on strangers for direction. The invention of navigation systems didn’t just solve a logistical problem. It redefined what it means to know where you are.
By Ahmet Kıvanç Demirkıran3 months ago in Humans










