family
In supporting their uniformed relative, army families embody the utmost contribution and commitment to their fellow countrymen.
Discipline and Trust in the Physician–Patient Relationship
Trust is one of the most essential elements in healthcare. Without it, even the most advanced medical knowledge can lose its effectiveness. The physician–patient relationship depends on confidence built through consistent behavior, ethical judgment, and professional discipline. Elvira Mami’s approach to medicine reflects these principles by emphasizing reliability, clarity, and respect in every clinical interaction.
By Financial Services Media14 days ago in Serve
Beyond London: Discovering the Best UK Island Tours for a Peaceful Escape. AI-Generated.
There’s something extraordinary about leaving the busy streets of London and finding yourself surrounded by the calm rhythm of the sea. The United Kingdom’s islands offer peace, beauty, and stories that feel far from the city — yet many of them are just a short journey away.
By ellenawrites3 months ago in Serve
Just Like in the Movies
My Uncle Harry (James Harry Smith,) was much like the character, Hub McCann, played by Robert Duvall. He served in the U.S. Marine Corps during WWII. He was in the brutal Mariana Islands campaign in the Pacific, where he was wounded in 1944 while taking another wounded soldier to safety during heavy fire, and later he received a Purple Heart.
By Shirley Belk5 months ago in Serve
Where the Dust Never Settles: A Waziristani’s Reflection on a Century of Foreign Wars
I was born in Waziristan, a rugged, beautiful region tucked between the jagged folds of the mountains on Pakistan’s northwest frontier. It’s a place where poetry lives in the same breath as war, and the sound of drone engines is as familiar as the call to prayer. To outsiders, Waziristan is often seen only in headlines—tribal, lawless, extremist. But those words barely scratch the surface of a place shaped not by its people’s will alone, but by a legacy of foreign wars that have passed through like storms, leaving behind scars and silence.
By Inzamam Ul Haq5 months ago in Serve
Three Wars and a Funeral: A Life Shaped by Foreign Boots on Afghan Soil
They say a man only lives one life. I’ve lived three—each born from war, each ending in silence. My name doesn’t matter, not anymore. What matters is what I saw, what I buried, and what I’ve come to understand. I was born in Kunar province in the winter of 1967, in a village that had more goats than people. My earliest memories were of snowfall, my father’s prayers, and the laughter of my brothers echoing in the narrow valleys. We had no electricity, no paved roads, but we had peace. Briefly.
By Inzamam Ul Haq5 months ago in Serve
A Life Between Giants: My Story as an Afghan Fighter
1. A War Before I Could Read I was six when the Soviets rolled into Afghanistan in 1979. I didn’t know what communism was, nor did I care. What I understood was the thunder of tanks that shook our village, the flames that devoured our school, and the day my older brother left with a rifle and never came back.
By Inzamam Ul Haq5 months ago in Serve
The Last Watch
As the sun began to fade, warm orange and crimson colors were seen scattered across a battered landscape where silence was now dominant. Trees stood like crooked skeletons. Mild and green soil was hardened and scarred by the war.. Soft screams were heard in the fields, but the breeze was too gentle for their surroundings.
By Osman Ahmed6 months ago in Serve
How Much Power Does America Have?
When you hear the term “global superpower,” chances are one country comes to mind—the United States of America. From military dominance to technological breakthroughs and cultural influence, America's global footprint is massive. But how much real power does the U.S. wield today? Let’s break it down across six key pillars.
By Engr. Mansoor Ahmad6 months ago in Serve











