success
The road to success is always under construction; share your equations for success — and learn some new ones.
The Soldier the Army Rejected—Who Became the Commander-in-Chief
The year was 1917, and the world was burning. Europe had been trench-locked in the First World War for three years, and the United States was finally stepping into the fray. Across the American Midwest, young men were lining up at recruitment centers, eager to prove their valor in the "war to end all wars."
By Frank Massey 19 days ago in Motivation
The Night I Almost Gave Up Everything
I still remember the weight of my phone in my hand that night. It was 2:47 AM. The glow from the screen lit up my tear-stained face in the darkness of my bedroom. My finger hovered over the "Send" button—one tap, and everything I'd worked for over the past three years would be gone.
By Fazal Hadi19 days ago in Motivation
9 Emotional Mistakes That Almost Broke Me
I didn’t break all at once. I cracked slowly, in ways no one noticed. From the outside, I looked fine. I smiled. I showed up. I kept going. But inside, I was exhausted in a way sleep couldn’t fix. I felt disconnected from myself, like I was living on autopilot and slowly disappearing.
By Fazal Hadi19 days ago in Motivation
7 Discipline Rules I Follow Even on Bad Days
I woke up at 2 a.m. to my cat knocking over a glass of water. By 6 a.m., I'd received a rejection email I'd been waiting weeks for. By 9 a.m., my car wouldn't start. By noon, I was crying in a coffee shop bathroom, mascara streaking down my face, wondering how people made life look so effortless.
By Fazal Hadi19 days ago in Motivation
The Child Who Was Saved by a Law for Animals: The Mary Ellen Wilson Story
If you walked the streets of New York City in 1874, you would have seen a metropolis on the verge of becoming the center of the world. It was the dawn of the Gilded Age. The Brooklyn Bridge was rising from the East River, and the wealth of the Vanderbilts and Astors was reshaping Fifth Avenue. It was an era of immense progress, industrial might, and aggressive ambition.
By Frank Massey 19 days ago in Motivation
Saad Punjwani: The Tiger of the Internet — A Defining Force in Pakistan’s Technological Renaissance
Introduction: When Speed Meets Vision In the global technology landscape—dominated by Silicon Valley giants, European research labs, and East Asian manufacturing powerhouses—very few individuals from emerging markets manage to carve a space so loud, so fast, and so disruptive that the world is forced to look again. Saad Punjwani, a Pakistani technology entrepreneur, innovator, digital architect, and AI pioneer, is one of those rare names.
By Jon B. Carroll19 days ago in Motivation
Why Highly Sensitive People Need Minimalism
A lot of people feel stressed or unsettled in a cluttered environment. But Highly Sensitive People, in particular, can be more prone to being impacted by negative effects of chaos and clutter. Too much sensory information, including visual clutter can easily make a Highly Sensitive Person feel overwhelmed and stressed.
By Jodie Rowe20 days ago in Motivation
Small Acts
In the quiet moments, when no one is watching, revolutions are seeded in the smallest of acts. These aren’t the grand speeches or the thunderous declarations; they are the whispers of change—almost imperceptible to the untrained eye—yet they carry the weight of an entire future. We often think of revolutions as the sudden eruptions of power, the tidal waves of force that sweep through history. But, in truth, they are often built from the quiet moments before the storm.
By luna hart20 days ago in Motivation











