Top Stories
Stories in Humans that you’ll love, handpicked by our team.
Lani’s Acorn
When I was young and Christmas rolled around I would watch “It’s a wonderful Life”. They would pretty much give it in every channel and I would end up seeing it multiple times. It’s a great movie with a heartwarming message of our own value. Or at least the value we have and don’t even know.
By WrittenWritRalf3 months ago in Humans
Never The Same Again
How many times have you gone somewhere one month or one year apart and seen that things have changed? How many people have you seen change in a small lapse of time? I know you’ve seen many. Some people don’t want to believe that change can happen fast because it has never happened to them. let me say that it’s normal; not everyone wants or needs change in their life.
By Semra Laureen Hill Jean3 months ago in Humans
Giving Thanks in 2025
My Thanksgiving began at 3:44 AM. Not because there were things to prepare for dinner, etc. but because one of my dogs needed desperately to go outside. I got out of our cozy, warm bed, slipped my jeans and shoes on and out we went into the 28-degree morning.
By Dana Crandell3 months ago in Humans
Perfect. Runner-Up in Maps of the Self Challenge. Content Warning.
In a perfect world I would never have been born. My maternal grandmother would never have been raped by her ex-husband and thus wouldn’t have fallen pregnant with her eleventh child: My mother. The girl would have grown up having girl-friends and would have been looked after by her older brothers and sisters. They would have warned her about the red flags that her highschool sweetheart was waving on full display: how he would say that he’d pick her up for a date and instead would blow her off to go drinking with his friends; how he was possessive and jealous whenever she was out of the house or out of his sight; how he bragged that he dated the girl with the best ass on the track team.
By Elizabeth Kaye Daugherty3 months ago in Humans
Strength In Solitude
Sometimes it takes losing nearly everyone you love to realize how precious life truly is. All too often we take for granted those who are sitting right next to us, we bury our face in our phones, or preoccupy ourselves with things that mean little compared to those we love. I told my wife years ago, prior to her passing "In The End I Stand Alone".
By Kaylon Forsyth3 months ago in Humans
Mid-Life Crisis?
Happy birthday. Your life is half over. What now? On November 2, I woke up to find I had turned 45. I'm not quite sure how that happened; I swear yesterday I was still in my thirties. But I did the math, and I am in fact 45. By quickly reviewing my family history, I confirmed my fears. My father, grandmother, and two great-grandparents only lived to their mid-sixties, two great-grandparents hit their late seventies, my other grandma and both grandpas died in their mid-eighties, two Great-Grandparents got to 88, another to 89, and one made it all the way to 90. Based on those statistics, it's a safe, and sobering, assumption that my sojourn here on earth is half over, and that's being optimistic. So as one often does at this stage of life, I felt the day called for a little self-reflection. What have I done with my first 45 years and what do I plan to do with the next?
By A. J. Schoenfeld3 months ago in Humans
a small bit of twine. Runner-Up in Maps of the Self Challenge.
~ A small bit of twine twisted around my wrist, embedding in my skin. I think the year was 1982. I didn't notice it at first until I felt the first tug pulling my small body in a direction I didn't want to go.
By Heather Hubler3 months ago in Humans
The Path from Destruction
So I'm "here," parked in Joe Pye Weed Field on a warm October night, with Kenny, Nate, and Mark, three friends I've known since childhood. We're all in our early twenties. It's 1988. There's plenty of Budweiser and cheap vodka going around.
By John R. Godwin3 months ago in Humans




