quotes
A collection of the best quotes ever spoken by scorned lovers and hopeless romantics throughout history.
Retro Tech 100
Retro Tech 100 The Sound Era: 10 Devices That Changed How We Heard the World. Before streaming became invisible, music was something you touched. It had texture, temperature, and ritual. You flipped switches, pressed clunky buttons, wound tape with a pencil, and carried sound like a secret. Every beat took effort; every song, a bit of patience.
By Sayed Zewayed6 months ago in Humans
When the Heart Becomes Mightier than the Mind
In every stage of human life, two forces guide our decisions: the mind and the heart. The mind represents logic, calculation, and reason, while the heart symbolizes feelings, passion, and emotion. Often, we are told to follow the mind because it is rational and safe. Yet, history, stories, and real-life experiences reveal that many of the greatest achievements of humanity were born not from pure logic, but from the powerful fire of emotion. When the heart becomes mightier than the mind, it awakens a strength that nothing else can create.
By Muhammad yar6 months ago in Humans
Why Everyone’s Chasing Virality — While Losing The One Thing That Actually Builds Trust. AI-Generated.
The Addiction to Virality I know what it feels like to live for numbers. Waking up and the first thing you check isn’t your phone alarm, but your stats. Did the piece blow up overnight? Did the post get shared? That dopamine hit when something takes off is addictive. But like all addictions, it comes with withdrawal.
By The Davids6 months ago in Humans
Salma Karina Hayat: Redefining Success Through Innovation and Service
In a world where success is often measured by titles, wealth, or accolades, there are rare individuals who redefine what achievement truly means. Salma Karina Hayat is one such individual. Her story is not simply about building profitable ventures—it is about weaving together innovation, resilience, and compassion into a life that creates impact far beyond the boardroom.
By Zeeshan and Salma Karina Hayat6 months ago in Humans
🌗 Light and Darkness: Embracing the Balance of Life
🌗 Light and Darkness: The Hidden Story of Life When people talk about life, they often divide it into two extremes: light and darkness. Light is usually praised as joy, hope, and success, while darkness is feared as sadness, loss, and failure. But life is never that simple. It is not a straight road paved with sunshine, nor is it an endless tunnel of night. Life is a mixture, a dance between the two — and only when we learn to honor both do we begin to understand its true beauty.
By Shehzad Anjum7 months ago in Humans
Renaissance Festival War Stories September 6/7, 2025
Continued from weekend 3... This weekend marks the halfway point in the season. I try to keep these posts dedicated towards the patrons, but today, the inspiration of the stories that hit home for me were sourced from our fellow warriors: the cast, crew, vendors, staff and more from the Minnesota Renaissance Festival.
By Tinka Boudit She/Her7 months ago in Humans
“I release what does not raise me.”
I was sipping tea in my aunt’s small backyard at dusk, watching the sky do what it always does: slow everything down. In a world that constantly rewards noise and outrage, peace doesn’t arrive by accident — it begins with a quiet choice. Holding on to anger feels like wearing clothes that don’t even belong to you — heavy, ugly, and strangely familiar. We convince ourselves that anger means we care, but often it only reveals how much we are hurting inside.
By Shehzad Anjum7 months ago in Humans
Heroes vs. Pretenders
Since the dawn of the social media era, Pakistan has been in a very weird competition. It’s no longer about courage, sacrifice, or building a nation—it’s about who can do the most TikTok dance while holding a latte in a $500 designer cup. And apparently, that qualifies you as a role model now.
By Shehzad Anjum7 months ago in Humans
Silent Lessons
When a Forgotten Book Found Me There are moments in life when you feel as if the universe is quietly nudging you toward something you had ignored for too long. For me, that nudge came in the shape of a thin, dust-covered book sitting silently on my family’s bookshelf—Ya Khuda by Qudratullah Shahab.
By Shehzad Anjum7 months ago in Humans








