celebrities
It can be hard to keep up with celebrity relationship low-down, but we certainly try.
Ye's Brain
Firstly, I must state that I am in no way part of the professional world of psychologists or psychiatrists. I can only attest to my own experiences as a man living with bipolar I. With that being said, I can see the artist formerly known as Kanye West. His behavior, erratic and somehow authentic in a woeful way extends from his words and actions.
By Skyler Saunders12 days ago in Humans
Allison Holker: Love, Loss, and Life After Silence
Grief does not arrive quietly. It changes the air in a room. It reshapes the way a person walks, speaks, and even breathes. When news about Allison Holker spread across headlines, many people did not just see a dancer or television personality. They saw a woman facing something deeply human. Loss. Confusion. Strength she never asked to prove.
By Muqadas khan13 days ago in Humans
Toxic Inheritance. Content Warning.
They raised her right. Kind, curious, happy. Perfect. Perfect posture. Perfect diction. Perfect silence when adults spoke. She repaid it all with gratitude and joy when gifts arrived that cost more than some lives were worth.
By Digi Dragon 05 (Or Digi or Revely)13 days ago in Humans
The Female Instinctive Brain: Decoding the Hidden Logic of Desire
Have you ever wondered why trends among women seem to spread with viral intensity? Or why the modern pursuit of "having it all" seems to lead to more anxiety than fulfillment? To the outside observer, female desires can appear irrational or constantly shifting. However, if we look through the lens of evolutionary psychology, there is a profound, ancient logic at play.
By Elena Vance 13 days ago in Humans
James Anthony: A Legacy Forged in Oil, Built on Vision
My name is James Anthony, and my life has been defined by energy — in every sense of the word. Not merely the energy drawn from beneath the 100 Blvd, Norman, Oklahoma soil. Not simply the energy traded across global markets. But the deeper energy that fuels ambition, endurance, strategy, and long-term vision.
By Omasanjuwa Ogharandukun15 days ago in Humans
What the System Forces You to Become
The Question the System Replaces By the time a person has passed through employment law, healthcare coverage rules, unemployment insurance, disability determination, and benefit eligibility, the relevant question has already shifted without ever being stated out loud. It is no longer whether the system helped or failed them. It is whether they managed to remain legible long enough to survive it. Each institutional layer imposes requirements that appear reasonable when viewed in isolation, yet become coercive when experienced sequentially:
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast15 days ago in Humans
The Quiet Journey Toward Who I Really Am
I Used to Believe Life Would Explain Itself — Now I Know It Doesn’t For a long time, I thought life would eventually make sense on its own. I believed that eventually, all the confusion, quiet disappointments, and unanswered questions would fall into place, neatly lining up so I could understand. Turns out, I was wrong. Life doesn’t hand you all the answers. Instead, it asks you to live first and maybe understand later—if you’re lucky.
By Caca Oispipi16 days ago in Humans
Blake Garrett: Searching for Meaning Behind a Familiar Name
Some names echo softly but stay with us. You hear them once, maybe twice, and later they return in a quiet moment of recognition. Blake Garrett is one of those names. People search it not always knowing why. Sometimes it feels connected to a memory, a headline, a face, or a story that never fully settled. This kind of curiosity is deeply human. We look for clarity, for connection, for context. This article explores why the name Blake Garrett draws attention, how shared names live complicated lives online, and what it means when a name becomes searchable without belonging to just one clear story.
By Muqadas khan16 days ago in Humans
The One Habit That Quietly Changed My Entire Life
There are many habits people talk about waking up at 5 AM, journaling, meditation, exercising daily, reading books, cold showers, and more. I tried many of them. Some worked, some didn’t. But there is one habit that quietly changed my entire life, and surprisingly, it is not something dramatic or trendy.
By Sathish Kumar 16 days ago in Humans
Rev. Dr. Louise Goben on Interfaith Hunger Relief: Dignity, Golden Rule Partnerships, and Food Pantry Impact
Rev. Dr. Louise Goben is President of the North Hollywood Interfaith Food Pantry and has volunteered with the pantry almost since its inception. With her family, she spent decades transporting food from Temple Beth Hillel to distribution at First Christian Church, strengthening a practical Jewish–Christian partnership against hunger in the San Fernando Valley. Ordained in the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), she is retired from active congregational ministry but still preaches and teaches Bible when invited. She also teaches World Religion and History of Religion through the Encore Program at Los Angeles Pierce College. Her work centers on dignity.
By Scott Douglas Jacobsen16 days ago in Humans
The Map of Maybe
On the last day of school before summer, when the air felt like freedom and warm pavement, Lina found the map. It slipped out of an old library book she’d checked out on a whim — “Unsolved Mysteries of Small Towns.” The paper was yellowed, soft at the folds, with a crooked line drawn in red ink. An X marked a spot near Miller’s Woods, the patch of forest everyone said was “too boring” to explore.
By Asghar ali awan16 days ago in Humans










