Latest Stories
Most recently published stories on Vocal.
Between Two Cities, One Unfinished Love
Between Two Cities, One Unfinished Love In 2010, my life quietly changed when I met her. There was nothing dramatic about that moment—no promises, no loud confessions—just a simple meeting that slowly found its place in my heart. She lived in Rawalpindi, surrounded by busy streets and constant movement, while I lived in Swat, among mountains that taught patience and silence. We belonged to two different cities, two different worlds, yet something unspoken connected us from the very beginning.
By Wings of Time 4 days ago in Lifehack
The Lie of Rich Corinthian Leather (And Other Things We Believed Because a Man With an Accent Said Them)
There was a time when a man could look into a camera, gently stroke a car seat, and convince an entire nation that luxury had a birthplace. That place was Corinth… Or so we were told.
By The Pompous Post4 days ago in Humor
Money - Is Everyone Desperate
The Saga Continues-More Bang For Your Buck It Appears That A Lot Of Systems Are Not Working It seems the economy is getting worse. Let's examine a few things that I have experieneed in the past year. This is just my personal experiences, however, if it is any indication of how our economy is doing, we might all be concerned.
By Susan Payton4 days ago in Humans
The Jar of Seconds
Saving Time to Change Everything Sara always felt rushed. Between school assignments, chores, and the constant stream of notifications on her phone, every day seemed to slip through her fingers. She would finish one task only to realize she had wasted hours scrolling through social media or replaying old habits. One evening, while cleaning her room, she stumbled upon an empty mason jar left over from her mother’s cooking projects. On a whim, she decided to use it—not for cookies, but for something far more unusual: time.
By Sudais Zakwan4 days ago in Lifehack
Rhythm of the Streets
Rhythm of the Streets How One Drum Changed Everything Zayan had never thought much about music beyond the playlists on his phone. Growing up in a busy neighborhood where the sounds of traffic, market stalls, and chatter blended into a constant hum, he believed rhythm existed only in noise, not art. That was until the day he discovered an old drum leaning against a brick wall near the corner café. Its surface was worn, the leather stretched thin, but it seemed to call to him in a way no song on his playlist ever had.
By Sudais Zakwan4 days ago in Beat
The Garden of Years
How Time Becomes a Friend, Not a Foe Amina Khan had always been fascinated by age. As a child, she would sit with her grandmother for hours, listening to stories of distant villages, lost traditions, and long-forgotten recipes. Her grandmother often smiled, her eyes twinkling with memories of decades gone by. “Longevity,” she would say, “is not just about years. It’s about how fully you live each one.” At the time, Amina didn’t fully understand. Years later, that wisdom became the guiding principle of her life.
By Sudais Zakwan4 days ago in Longevity
Reality Was Supposed to Make Sense. Science Disagreed.
We tend to assume reality is stable because that assumption is useful. Time moves forward. Solid things stay solid. Cause politely precedes effect. It’s a comforting arrangement. Science has spent the last century suggesting that reality never signed that agreement. The deeper we look, the less the universe resembles a well-behaved machine and the more it feels like a system that tolerates our expectations only until we examine them closely. Every major discovery seems to follow the same pattern: something we thought was fundamental turns out to be… negotiable. Which raises an uncomfortable possibility. Maybe reality didn’t become strange. Maybe we just started paying attention. Time Isn’t Universal — Which Feels Slightly Unfair Time feels obvious. Clocks tick. Events happen. Everyone agrees on when lunch is. At least locally. Relativity introduced an idea that still feels mildly rude: time passes differently depending on motion and gravity. Two observers can measure different durations between the same events, and physics refuses to choose sides. Astronauts returning from orbit have technically aged a little less than people on Earth. GPS satellites must constantly correct for time dilation or navigation systems would drift into chaos. So time isn’t a shared universal river. It’s more like a personal experience stitched to movement through space. Which means somewhere, right now, two perfectly accurate clocks are disagreeing — and neither is wrong. Solid Matter Is Mostly Empty Space Pretending Otherwise If you knock on a table, it feels confidently real. The kind of solid you don’t question. Physics quietly suggests you probably should. Atoms are mostly empty space. What you experience as solidity is the electromagnetic repulsion between particles preventing them from occupying the same position. You’re not touching the table in the way intuition suggests; you’re encountering a boundary enforced by invisible forces. Matter behaves less like a brick wall and more like a negotiation between fields. The universe runs on agreements between things that never actually meet. Which is deeply inconvenient if you prefer reality to feel straightforward. Quantum Particles Refuse to Commit Until Asked Classical physics taught us that objects have definite properties whether or not we observe them. Quantum mechanics looked at that assumption and declined to participate. At small scales, particles behave as overlapping probabilities rather than fixed objects. They exist in multiple possible states until measurement forces a specific outcome. Before interaction, reality seems undecided. Scientists still debate what this means philosophically, but experiments keep confirming the behavior. Which leaves us with an unsettling thought: the universe might not be a finished structure waiting to be understood. It might be an ongoing process that becomes definite only when something engages with it. Empty Space Is Busy Being Empty “Nothing” sounds simple. Physics has other plans. Even a vacuum contains fluctuating quantum fields where particles appear and disappear constantly. These tiny events influence measurable forces and shape how matter behaves. Silence, it turns out, is noisy. Nothingness isn’t absence. It’s activity we rarely notice. Your Brain Edits Reality Before You See It We like to believe perception is passive — eyes open, information enters, reality arrives. Neuroscience suggests something closer to improvisation. Your brain predicts incoming data, fills gaps, filters noise, and constructs a usable version of the world before you become aware of it. You’re not seeing raw reality; you’re seeing a model optimized for survival. Accuracy was never the main goal. Efficiency was. Which explains why reality feels coherent even when it isn’t entirely accurate. The Universe Might End Quietly Popular imagination prefers dramatic endings. Cosmic explosions. Spectacular finales. Current cosmological models suggest something less theatrical: continued expansion, gradual cooling, stars fading one by one until energy spreads thin across an increasingly quiet universe. No grand climax. Just a slow dimming. Even the end of everything might refuse to perform for us. So What Actually Changed? None of these discoveries made reality stranger. They revealed that our assumptions were overly confident. Time isn’t universal. Matter isn’t solid. Observation isn’t passive. Nothing isn’t empty. Perception isn’t objective. The universe doesn’t exist to feel intuitive. It exists to follow rules that occasionally look like practical jokes from our perspective. And every time we think we’ve reached the final explanation, reality expands just enough to remind us that certainty is temporary. We didn’t lose simplicity because science complicated the universe. We lost it because we started looking closer — and reality became a little more unreal.
By Mina Carey4 days ago in FYI
A Smile in the Rain
A Smile in the Rain Moments That Make the Heart Speak Amara had never been good at noticing people. She moved through life with her head down, focusing on schedules, deadlines, and the constant noise of her own thoughts. That rainy afternoon, she had ducked into a small café to escape the sudden downpour, shaking drops from her umbrella and wiping fog from her glasses. The place was warm, fragrant with coffee and pastries, and almost empty, save for a young man sitting by the window with a sketchbook in hand.
By Sudais Zakwan4 days ago in Blush









