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The Importance of A Motherly Touch
When you think of a motherly love, what comes into mind? A mother who can comfort you and that you can rely on when things get emotionally, financially, and physically tough. Where you are down in your luck. Just kidding, I am not going to rhyme; this isn’t a poetry, this is an article. All jokes aside, I had raising questions about motherhood from a daughter’s standpoint, the question I will be answering in this article is, “if my mother was not in my life or ever there for me, do I have to love her?” The answer will be no, you do not have to. I believe that there is an option within a human being that differentiate an animal to a human. Humans was given the ability to make decisions and given the ability to go through those life decisions. If a human was to say, ‘hey, I do not love you because you were not in my life all these years’ then yes, they have the right to do so. Also, a human was given the ability to prove their trust and love to another human being, right? When a baby is born with their crowning heads and crying energy through the vigorous labor pains of a woman, they are wrapped in a hospital blanket and given to the woman and she embraces her new born with a lot of hugs and kisses. Did you know that if a baby is not embraced by a human touch of a mother or a father, it will stunt the baby’s growth? Or even lose weight and potentially die? It is important for human survival if the baby receives all the love and care. Once the woman touches the baby and gives the knowledge that the baby is in the love and care of someone’s arms for eternity then they know who to love and trust. That is when the woman who gave birth to the baby proves that this is in fact a start of an everlasting relationship. This is the start of motherhood.
By Nikki Say it Now3 months ago in Journal
Tomonobu Itagaki, The Fearless Creator Behind Dead or Alive and Ninja Gaiden, Dies at 57
Some legends whisper their legacy. Others carve it into steel and pixels. Tomonobu Itagaki was the latter—a man who wore sunglasses indoors, spoke his mind in an industry that feared honesty, and built games that made your thumbs bleed and your heart race. On October 16, 2025, the gaming world lost one of its most unapologetically bold creators.
By Omasanjuwa Ogharandukun3 months ago in Journal
Who is Naomi Osaka?
They said power players were built in gyms. Naomi Osaka proved they’re built in silence. In a sport that thrives on precision and pressure, Naomi Osaka didn’t just serve aces—she served purpose. She became more than an athlete; she became a movement. From her quiet beginnings to becoming one of the highest-paid female athletes on the planet, Osaka’s journey reads like a modern-day fairy tale with grit, grief, and grace woven through every page.
By Omasanjuwa Ogharandukun3 months ago in Journal
Despite Injury Scare, Naomi Osaka Rises Like a Phoenix, Dethrones Defending Champion Suzan Lamens in a Thrilling Osaka Showdown
When Naomi Osaka steps onto a court bearing her own name — Osaka — there’s an unspoken poetry in the air. It’s not just tennis; it’s theatre. The lights burn brighter, the crowd hums louder, and every forehand feels like a stanza written in the ink of redemption.
By Omasanjuwa Ogharandukun3 months ago in Journal
The Death of Silicon: How a Rainbow Crystal Could Rewrite the Future of Technology
Silicon has been the invisible center of modern civilization for almost a century. Every computer, smartphone, satellite, and even modern refrigerators depend on this component. Silicon turned sand into fast technology, sparking a digital revolution that has shaped our life.
By Shahjahan Kabir Khan3 months ago in Journal
When Home Needs Flexibility: The Rise of Modular Seating
In recent years, homeowners have grown increasingly interested in furniture that adapts, adjusts, and rearranges itself around life’s evolving rhythms. Gone are the days when a sofa must remain fixed — today, the idea of a living room is more fluid, more mutable, more responsive. At the heart of this shift lies the concept of a modular sofa: a system of pieces (seats, ottomans, chaise units, corners) that can be reconfigured to suit space, social patterns, and even pets.
By charliesamuel3 months ago in Journal
The Day I Discovered I'd Been Wasting Half My Life in the Gym
The Day I Discovered I'd Been Wasting Half My Life in the Gym It was a Tuesday evening, and I was sprawled on my couch, too exhausted to cook dinner after another grueling two-hour gym session. My shoulders ached, my knees throbbed, and despite six months of religious dedication to my workout routine, my physique looked virtually identical to when I started. I caught my reflection in the TV screen and felt something break inside me not my spirit, but rather my blind faith in the "more is better" mentality that had consumed my life.
By Tamer saleh3 months ago in Journal
A room built outward: listening to 'In via di sviluppo'
There are debuts that arrive like press conferences. This one walks in and sits down. 'In via di sviluppo' keeps its shoulders narrow, lets arrangement do the talking, and asks you to listen rather than react. Guitars are placed like walls, electronics run along the baseboards, and the voice keeps a straight line through the middle. If you wait for spectacle, you’ll miss the point. The surprise isn’t volume; it’s patience.
By The Global Verge3 months ago in Journal
The Dawn of Samsung’s Smart Shades: Could the Ray-Ban Killer Arrive in 2026?
Smart glasses constitute the next major advance in the ever changing world of wearable technology. Integrating cameras, voice assistants, and artificial intelligence capability, Meta's Ray-Ban smart glasses have already drawn notice for fusing form with function. But the emphasis might soon change. Unproven sources suggest that Samsung is secretly creating a rival, perhaps a Ray-Ban killer that would change our view, record, and interaction with our environment. If the news is correct, we might see its launch sooner rather than later.
By Shahjahan Kabir Khan3 months ago in Journal










