Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Journal.
Rethinking Modern Medicine: Andrew Rudin, MD, on Why Lifestyle Must Come Before Intervention
For much of the last half century, modern healthcare has followed a familiar pattern. When disease appears, the response is swift and technologically sophisticated. Prescriptions are written. Procedures are scheduled. Devices are implanted. From cholesterol lowering injections to elective cardiac stent placements, the prevailing narrative has been clear: advanced medicine is the primary solution, and lifestyle change is a secondary consideration, if it is considered at all.
By Dr. Andrew Rudinabout a month ago in Journal
A Man Who Knew Infinity: Elon Musk
What kind of person looks at the sky and doesn’t see limits, but possibilities? For Elon Musk, infinity is not an abstract concept—it’s a mindset. While most people focus on what is practical or safe, Musk has built a career by asking questions that sound impossible: Can humans live on Mars? Can cars drive themselves? Can we connect the human brain to machines?
By John Smithabout a month ago in Journal
Lessons 2026 Is Already Teaching Us
Have you ever noticed how some years don’t arrive loudly—but instead, teach us quietly? 2026 feels like that kind of year. Not dramatic at first glance, not revolutionary overnight, but deeply transformative in subtle, meaningful ways. It’s a year that doesn’t shout lessons—it whispers them, asking us to slow down, pay attention, and reflect.
By John Smithabout a month ago in Journal
Boss or Leader: What Is the Difference?
Definitions of Boss and Leader According to the dictionary, a boss is a person in charge of others in the workplace. A boss is responsible for assigning tasks, setting schedules, and approving leave for those under his authority.
By Margaret Minnicksabout a month ago in Journal
Airports in Morocco Taught Me More Than I Expected
I never thought an airport would teach me anything meaningful about a country. Airports, to me, were always neutral spaces—places designed to move people efficiently from one point to another. Identical floors, identical signs, identical impatience. Morocco changed that assumption almost immediately.
By Ariel Cohenabout a month ago in Journal
The Small Signals That Told Me the Air Was Changing for the Better
I did not notice the air change all at once. There was no dramatic moment, no obvious shift that demanded attention. Instead, the change revealed itself through small signals. Signals that were easy to miss if you were not paying attention.
By illumipureabout a month ago in Journal
Respectfully. Content Warning.
I am here for popping my shit. I write here because this is my center and my space. I felt like regardless of how it's written it's being written for folks that get that it's being written from the heart and that my works aren't for the longing English men that are just here for the grammar corrects or the what should be here or not. Yes , you have every right to say what you wanna say ,but I'm here to pop my shi ( shit) , understand?
By Erica Williamsabout a month ago in Journal
Why Long-Term SEO Beats Paid Ads for Melbourne Businesses?
I didn’t notice the problem because anything was broken. The app launched. Features worked. Metrics looked fine. Yet every time we added a new way for users to interact with the app, something subtle shifted. Small bugs appeared. Edge cases multiplied. Fixes took longer than they used to.
By Jane Smithabout a month ago in Journal
The River That Taught Me Patience . AI-Generated.
I didn’t plan on learning anything the day I wandered down to the old river near my childhood home. I simply wanted fresh air—an escape from a week that felt too heavy to carry. But as I stood there watching the slow movement of the water, I realized I had walked straight into a lesson I didn’t know I needed.
By Beckett Dowhanabout a month ago in Journal







