humanity
For better or for worse, relationships reveal the core of the human condition.
Socialism
Socialism is one of the most used forms of government since it was coined. Despite the ancients running similar systems, it has taken a different form in each place, depending on regions. The different forms all have similar core principles. Yet they do differ in the smaller factors. It conquered many nations with its promises of equality and high social benefits. The equality of the systems draws so many to their ideas. They are generally simple and offer a sense of equality, but they deliver few results that consolidate power in the ruling elite. As this system has been tried, it has not always been successful. It is a system of government control that lacks personal ownership and offers little room for dissent. Socialism will ultimately depend on everyone working together to make the system function, but it will still suffer from financial difficulties. Over a hundred years, the results have spoken: socialism has proven it struggles without elements of capitalism to address financial issues.
By Sarah Danaher32 minutes ago in Humans
Paging Doctor Amazon!
Every trip to the Emergency Room with my mother, age 95, has deepened my appreciation for our undervalued nurses and support staff while confirming how broken the medical system has become. The Trump administration's cut in educational funding that targets nursing and other medical programs is demoralizing female students of color who are starting to drop out of school.
By Lisa Suhayabout an hour ago in Humans
Dear Diary, I want to tell you about how I learned to understand perception.
In an earlier story, I told you about how I stopped wearing a hijab. Now I want to back up a bit to tell you about how I began wearing it and my experience with it, as it was all a bit unconventional.
By Diary of Some Girlabout 4 hours ago in Humans
The Toxic Feminine and the Divine Feminine: What They Are and What They Are Not
The words “feminine” and “womanhood” are often used as if they mean the same thing, but they do not. Feminine energy is not limited to gender. It is a universal force found in all people, just as masculine energy is. The problem begins when the feminine is twisted into something manipulative, fearful, or self‑erasing. That twisted version is what many people call the toxic feminine. It is not the same as the divine feminine, which is the healthy, grounded, and life‑giving expression of feminine energy found in spiritual traditions around the world. Understanding the difference helps us see that the issue is not femininity itself, but the systems and beliefs that distort it.
By Julie O'Hara - Author, Poet and Spiritual Warriorabout 7 hours ago in Humans
Toxic Patriarchy and Divine Masculinity: Understanding the Difference
The words “masculinity” and “patriarchy” get used so often that people sometimes forget they are not the same thing. Masculinity itself is not harmful. It is a natural expression of strength, protection, clarity, and grounded presence. The problem begins when masculinity is twisted into something controlling, fearful, or dominating. That twisted version is what many people call toxic patriarchy. It is not the same as divine masculinity, which is the healthy, balanced, and life‑giving expression of masculine energy found in spiritual traditions around the world. Understanding the difference helps us see that the issue is not men or masculinity itself, but the systems and beliefs that distort it.
By Julie O'Hara - Author, Poet and Spiritual Warriorabout 7 hours ago in Humans
Why Heaven and Hell Don’t Exist: How Ancient Teachings Became Misunderstood
Most of us grew up with some version of the same story. If you are good, you go to heaven. If you are bad, you go to hell. Heaven is perfect and bright. Hell is dark and full of fire. The story is simple, clear, and easy to use as a warning. It is also, when you look closely at history and sacred texts, not actually what the earliest teachers said. Heaven and hell as physical places of eternal reward and eternal punishment are not ancient universal truths. They are later ideas, built from misunderstandings, mistranslations, and, at times, deliberate choices by people in power who found fear to be a useful tool.
By Julie O'Hara - Author, Poet and Spiritual Warriorabout 7 hours ago in Humans
Head Space / Body Space / Shared Space
🔹 Series Introduction We do not live inside circumstances. We live inside structures. This trilogy explores the architecture of perception — how head spaces shape body spaces, and how both silently construct the shared environments we call relationships, rooms, and culture. Alignment is not intensity. It is design.
By Flower InBloomabout 9 hours ago in Humans
Glory To The Heroes
Growing up in Ukraine, I loved listening to my Gma. Her stories about World War II sounded so eventful. She was a teenager when the war started, but her memory held it all: explosions, hiding in a ditch with each air raid, and always being scared for her life. When German soldiers walked through their houses, picking up healthy girls for labor and taking people’s cows for food, she was hiding in fear.
By Nina Domrichevaabout 10 hours ago in Humans








