history
Since discovering alcohol a millennium ago, humans have been gung-ho about this liquid drug; Voyage back in time to map out the history of alcohol and drinking.
"I Made a Copy of a Labubu Doll — It Was Easier Than You Think"
I’ve always loved the charm and quirkiness of designer toys, but one figure in particular had captured my heart: the Labubu doll. With its mischievous grin, oversized ears, and wild hair, Labubu looked like something straight out of a dream—or a nightmare, depending on your perspective. The problem? The real ones were either sold out or insanely expensive on resale sites. We're talking $200 and up for a six-inch toy.
By Nizam khan6 months ago in Proof
"The Day I Met an Alien: A True Story of the Unbelievable"
I’m not the kind of person who sees ghosts in the mirror or believes in every UFO sighting on YouTube. I’ve lived in a small rural town in Colorado my entire life, where the strangest thing you might encounter is a raccoon knocking over a trash can. But something happened on the night of September 13th, 2023, that flipped my world upside down.
By Nizam khan6 months ago in Proof
A Man Who Bent Metal With His Mind—LIVE on TV!
It was the year 1960 when a young man named Uri Geller stunned audiences on American and British television by doing things that seemed impossible—things no normal human could do. Uri claimed that his mind was so powerful, he could manipulate reality itself. Yes—anything, he said, literally anything.
By Jehanzeb Khan6 months ago in Proof
The Gap.
The Pan-American Highway is one of humanity’s greatest triumphs of will. It is a ribbon of asphalt stretching over 19,000 miles, a nearly unbroken line connecting the frozen tundras of Alaska to the windswept plains of Argentina. I say *nearly* unbroken, because there is one place where the asphalt crumbles to dirt, the road signs vanish, and civilization itself gives up. This place is a 66-mile stretch of raw, primordial wilderness separating Colombia from Panama. It has a name spoken in whispers by travelers, a name that has become synonymous with a very specific kind of hell: the Darién Gap.
By MUHAMMAD FARHAN6 months ago in Proof
The Invisible Hands: How Elite Families Still Shape Our World Today
The Power You Were Never Meant to See They don’t run for elections. They don’t make viral videos. And yet, in boardrooms, back channels, and billion-dollar negotiations, they shape your world. For over 300 years, a select circle of elite families has quietly influenced finance, politics, science, religion, and even revolutions. This is not conspiracy; it’s history. Their fingerprints are on central banks, pharmaceutical giants, intelligence agencies, and global institutions. Through deep research across religious texts, political history, scholarly books, academic articles, classified reports, and even underground podcasts, this article uncovers the full scope of elite family influence—and why it still matters more than ever.
By DRE Explains6 months ago in Proof
An American Girl’s Marriage with a Pashtoon
Love does not ask for passports, languages, or traditions—it simply happens. This story is about Emma, an American girl from California, who found love where she least expected it: in the heart of the Pashtoon culture of Pakistan.
By aadam khan6 months ago in Proof
The Margin.
In the autumn of 1941, London was a city holding its breath. By day, we swept up the glass and brick from the previous night’s terror. By night, we huddled in shelters, listening to the symphony of death from above—the mournful drone of bombers, the sharp bark of anti-aircraft guns, and the deafening roar as another piece of our world was torn away. My sanctuary in this chaos was the library. I was a librarian, a guardian of stories in a world that seemed intent on erasing them. My job, I thought, was to protect our books from the bombs.
By MUHAMMAD FARHAN6 months ago in Proof
The Zone of Silence.
In our modern world, we are drowning in signals. Wi-Fi, GPS, radio waves, and cellular data form an invisible, inescapable web that connects us all. We are never truly lost, never truly out of touch. But what if there was a place where that web simply… broke? A place where the modern world falls silent, where technology dies, and something much older and stranger whispers in the quiet. Such a place exists. In the stark, beautiful emptiness of the Mapimí Biosphere Reserve in Durango, Mexico, lies a patch of desert known as La Zona del Silencio—the Zone of Silence.
By MUHAMMAD FARHAN7 months ago in Proof
The Ship That Vanished: The Unsolved Mystery of the Mary Celeste.
The ocean keeps its secrets better than any soul on earth. On December 5, 1872, in the vast, rolling expanse of the Atlantic between the Azores and Portugal, the crew of the Canadian brigantine *Dei Gratia* spotted a ship drifting aimlessly. Her sails were set but tattered, and she moved with an unnerving, erratic grace, like a phantom dancing to a song no one could hear. She was the *Mary Celeste*, and she was utterly, eerily alone.
By MUHAMMAD FARHAN7 months ago in Proof
How to Read a Cocktail Recipe Like a Bartender
Reading a cocktail recipe may seem straightforward — until you realize you're not sure what “dry shake,” “dash,” or “build in glass” really mean. Whether you're a curious beginner or an aspiring home mixologist, learning how to read a cocktail recipe like a bartender is a key step toward making balanced, bar-quality drinks at home.
By Aisha Patel8 months ago in Proof
The Town That Burned Beneath: Centralia’s Eternal Flame
The Town That Vanished Overnight: The Forgotten Mystery of Centralia, Pennsylvania On a sunny spring morning in 1962, the residents of Centralia, Pennsylvania, went about their day like any other. Children played in the yards, shopkeepers opened their businesses, and the faint smell of coal drifted through the air—a common scent in this small mining town. No one suspected that beneath their feet, a fire had begun that would eventually consume their homes, their history, and their entire town.
By Umair Khan8 months ago in Proof











