noor ul amin
Stories (149)
Filter by community
The Memory Architects
Dr. Elena Vasquez pressed her palm against the biometric scanner, feeling the familiar tingle as the quantum reader mapped every ridge and valley of her fingerprint at the molecular level. The laboratory doors whispered open, revealing the crown jewel of the Institute for Cognitive Enhancement: the Memory Synthesis Chamber.
By noor ul amin7 months ago in Futurism
The Cartographer of Lost Things
The town of Oakhaven was a place steeped in quiet decay, a forgotten corner of the world where time seemed to move at a snail's pace. Its buildings, once grand, now leaned with a weary grace, and its cobblestone streets were often claimed by moss. But amongst the faded grandeur stood a small, unassuming shop, its windows perpetually dusty, its sign creaking in the slightest breeze: "Elias Thorne: Cartographer."
By noor ul amin7 months ago in Humans
The Weight of Understanding: Love's True Measure
In the quiet, unassuming town of Havenwood, nestled beside the Whispering Pines forest, lived a young woman named Elara. From her earliest memories, Elara possessed an earnest heart, believing in the inherent goodness of people. She moved through life with an open hand, quick to offer help, slow to judge, and ever convinced that love was an unconditional force, a boundless ocean from which everyone drew without measure. Her grandmother, a woman of deep wisdom and gentle eyes, often watched Elara with a tender sadness, a premonition of the lessons life was preparing to teach her.
By noor ul amin7 months ago in Humans
The Last Letter
The rain drummed against the windows of the old bookshop as Elena sorted through another box of estate donations. Thunder rolled overhead, and she pulled her cardigan tighter around her shoulders. Working alone in *Chapters & Verse* after closing time had become her refuge—a place where she could lose herself among stories that belonged to other people, other lives that seemed infinitely more interesting than her own.
By noor ul amin7 months ago in Humans
The Mirror's Truth
Maya stared at her reflection in the bathroom mirror, avoiding her own eyes. The woman looking back at her seemed like a stranger—shoulders slumped, dark circles under tired eyes, wearing the same wrinkled clothes she'd thrown on three days ago. At twenty-eight, she felt ancient, trapped in a life that had somehow become a series of disappointments strung together by Netflix binges and takeout containers.
By noor ul amin7 months ago in Humans
The Weight of Moments
She found him on a Tuesday, sitting on the bench where pigeons gathered like thoughts around scattered breadcrumbs. He was reading Heraclitus, his finger tracing the ancient words as if they might dissolve under too much pressure. The autumn light fell across his shoulders in strips of gold and amber, and something about the way he held stillness made her stop walking.
By noor ul amin7 months ago in Fiction
The Side Effects of Protein-Rich Diets and Their Association with Colon Cancer
In our quest for better health and the perfect physique, protein has become the darling nutrient of the modern diet. From keto enthusiasts to bodybuilders, everyone seems to be loading up on protein powders, steaks, and chicken breasts. But what happens when our pursuit of protein goes too far? Recent research reveals a complex relationship between high-protein diets and our health—particularly concerning their potential link to colon cancer.
By noor ul amin7 months ago in Humans
How I Turned My Anxiety into a Superpower—And Built a Life I Love
Introduction: The Day I Froze I was standing in line at a coffee shop when it hit me—my heart began pounding, my vision blurred, and I felt like the walls were closing in. I walked out, leaving my drink and dignity behind. That moment, though humiliating, changed everything.This is not just a story of survival. It’s a blueprint. A step-by-step guide born from lived experience—about how I transformed my worst mental enemy (anxiety) into my greatest personal asset.
By noor ul amin7 months ago in Confessions
The Million-Dollar Mistake
Jake stared at the reporter, knowing how ridiculous that sounded. But it was true. Every word of it. "Let me back up,"* he said, settling into his chair. *"Three years ago, I was twenty-four, living in my mom's basement, and working at a dead-end retail job. I had exactly forty-seven dollars in my bank account and a mountain of student debt that kept me awake at night."
By noor ul amin7 months ago in Humans
