teacher
All about teachers and the world of teaching; teachers sharing their best and worst interactions with students, best teaching practices, the path to becoming a teacher, and more.
Middle East Diplomatic Initiatives and Regional Conflicts in 2026: Challenges and Opportunities
1. Current Geopolitical Landscape The Middle East encompasses nations with diverse political systems, religious affiliations, and economic priorities. As of 2026, key issues shaping the region include:
By shahkar jalala day ago in Education
I Thought I Was Lazy — I Was Actually Burned Out
I didn’t hate working. I hated waking up. And for months, I thought that meant I was lazy. It started quietly. I stopped answering messages right away. I stared at my to-do list longer than I actually worked on it. I would open my laptop, read the same sentence three times, and still not understand it. Simple tasks felt like lifting furniture up a staircase alone. But instead of asking what was wrong, I asked, What’s wrong with me? I called myself undisciplined. Dramatic. Weak. I told myself other people were doing more with less sleep, less support, less time. I compared my worst days to everyone else’s highlight reels and decided I simply didn’t want success badly enough. So I tried harder. I downloaded productivity apps. I watched motivational videos at 2 AM. I wrote affirmations on sticky notes and placed them on my wall like little judges. “No excuses.” “Be consistent.” “Winners don’t quit.” Every morning I promised myself I would be better. Every night I went to bed feeling like I had failed. The strange thing about burnout is that it doesn’t look dramatic. There’s no visible collapse. You still show up. You still function. You still smile in conversations. But inside, everything feels heavy. Even breathing feels like effort. I stopped enjoying things I used to love. Music sounded like noise. Books felt like assignments. Conversations felt like performances I didn’t rehearse for. I wasn’t sad exactly — just tired in a way sleep couldn’t fix. But I didn’t know the word for it. Where I grew up, exhaustion was proof you were working hard. If you weren’t tired, you weren’t trying. If you rested, you risked falling behind. So when my body begged me to slow down, I translated it as weakness. Lazy people procrastinate because they don’t care. Burned-out people procrastinate because they care too much for too long without pause. I didn’t know that yet. Instead, I built shame around my slowness. I would sit at my desk frozen, unable to start, and whisper to myself, “Why can’t you just do it?” The worst part wasn’t the unfinished tasks. It was the self-disgust. The world is very kind to overachievers — until they break. For years, I had been the reliable one. The responsible one. The one who met deadlines and exceeded expectations. I didn’t notice that my identity was slowly attaching itself to performance. If I wasn’t producing, I felt invisible. So when my energy disappeared, it felt like my value disappeared too. I thought laziness meant not wanting to move. But what I felt was wanting to move and being unable to. I wanted to care. I wanted to be ambitious. I wanted to feel that spark again. Instead, everything felt like walking through water. One afternoon, I missed a deadline. Not because I forgot — but because I physically couldn’t make myself open the file. I sat there for hours, heart racing, staring at the screen. The guilt was louder than any alarm clock. That was the moment something shifted. Lazy people don’t cry over unfinished work. Lazy people don’t panic about not doing enough. Lazy people don’t lie awake at night planning how they’ll “fix themselves” tomorrow. Burned-out people do. Burnout isn’t loud. It doesn’t announce itself like a breakdown. It disguises itself as indifference. It whispers, “Maybe you’re just not built for this.” It convinces you the problem is your character, not your capacity. When I finally said the words — “I think I’m burned out” — it felt like exhaling after holding my breath for years. Burnout wasn’t about being incapable. It was about being overloaded. Too many expectations. Too much self-pressure. Too little rest. Too little compassion. I had been sprinting through life without noticing there was no finish line. Rest felt illegal at first. I would take a break and immediately feel anxious. I would close my laptop and feel guilty. I had trained myself to believe that slowing down was failure. But slowly, I started testing a new belief: Maybe exhaustion isn’t a flaw. Maybe it’s information. I began taking small pauses without earning them first. I let tasks sit unfinished without attaching my worth to them. I stopped glorifying “busy.” I stopped romanticizing overwork. It wasn’t dramatic healing. It was quiet permission. Permission to not be optimized. Permission to not be extraordinary. Permission to exist without constantly proving it. The hardest part was forgiving myself for all the names I had called myself. For the months I spent thinking I was defective. For the mornings I stared at my reflection and saw someone falling behind. I wasn’t falling behind. I was depleted. There’s a difference. Laziness says, “I don’t care.” Burnout says, “I can’t carry this anymore.” I cared too much for too long without refilling. Now, when I feel that familiar heaviness creeping back, I don’t reach for harsher discipline. I reach for gentleness. I ask what I’ve been carrying. I ask what I’ve been ignoring. I ask where I’ve been abandoning myself in the name of productivity. And sometimes, I just close the laptop. Not because I’m quitting. But because I’m choosing to stay. I thought I was lazy. I was actually tired of surviving my own expectations. And learning that difference might have saved me.
By Faizan Malik3 days ago in Education
Redefining Health in a High-Performance World
In the modern era, "Health and Fitness" is often reduced to a series of aesthetic milestones—six-pack abs, a specific number on a scale, or the ability to run a marathon. However, true vitality is far more profound. It is the synergy between physical capability, nutritional wisdom, and mental resilience. This article moves beyond the surface-level trends to provide a practical, deep-thought guide to sustainable well-being.
By Being Inquisitive4 days ago in Education
AI, Tech, and Thriving in Online Business
The landscape of business and work is undergoing a monumental transformation, driven by rapid advancements in Artificial Intelligence and ever-evolving digital technologies. For entrepreneurs, freelancers, and ambitious professionals, understanding and leveraging these trends is not just an advantage—it's a necessity for thriving in the fast-growing online economy of 2026 and beyond. This article explores key areas where technology intersects with opportunity, offering insights into making money, optimizing operations, and securing your place in the future of work.
By Being Inquisitive4 days ago in Education
How Meteorites Differ from Meteors: Understanding Space Rocks Before and After They Hit Earth
The Simple Difference: Stage of the Journey The easiest way to understand the difference is this: • Meteoroid – A small rocky or metallic object traveling through space.
By shahkar jalal4 days ago in Education
What Makes Venus Visible in Daytime? The Science Behind Seeing the “Morning Star” in Broad Daylight
Venus: The Brightest Planet in the Sky Among all the planets visible from Earth, Venus is by far the brightest. At its peak, Venus reaches an apparent magnitude of about –4.6, making it brighter than any star in the sky and second only to the Moon in nighttime brightness.
By shahkar jalal4 days ago in Education
What Causes Green Flashes at Sunset? The Science Behind One of Nature’s Rarest Optical Phenomena
What Is a Green Flash? A green flash is a brief green-colored burst or rim of light visible at the upper edge of the Sun just as it sets—or, more rarely, just as it rises.
By shahkar jalal4 days ago in Education
Why the Sun Looks Red at Sunrise and Sunset: The Science Behind Nature’s Most Beautiful Light Show
The Sun Is Actually White Before explaining the red color, it’s important to clarify something surprising: The Sun is not yellow or red by nature—it emits white light.
By shahkar jalal4 days ago in Education











