review
Reviews of relationship guides and the ever-changing love landscape.
Top Fashion Websites Every Style Enthusiast Should Know
The fashion industry has rapidly evolved with the growth of digital technology and e-commerce. Today, fashion lovers no longer rely only on physical stores or seasonal fashion magazines to stay updated with trends. Instead, they explore online fashion websites that offer instant access to global designers, emerging brands, and the latest style movements.
By Backlinks Cart14 days ago in Humans
Take Me to Church: The Gospel of What They Tried to Make Us Hate
A lyrical essay on Hozier’s “Take Me to Church” as a meditation on shame, sexuality, institutional judgment, and the reclaiming of humanity through love. Hozier has described the song as being about sex, humanity, and the way church doctrine can teach shame around sexuality, while emphasizing that it is not an attack on faith itself.
By Flower InBloom15 days ago in Humans
Deep Love Quotes That Will Melt Your Heart
Love is the most profound emotion, capable of transforming hearts and souls. It is the language of the soul, whispered in glances, spoken through touch, and felt deeply in every beat of the heart. Here are some deep love quotes that capture the essence of this timeless emotion, each one crafted to resonate with your heart and stir your soul.
By Ahmed aldeabella16 days ago in Humans
Practice vs Performance
One of the quiet pressures shaping modern communication is the assumption that anything written should be immediately shareable. Drafts blur into declarations, and exploration is mistaken for conclusion. Under this pressure, writing becomes performative by default. The moment words are placed on a page, they are treated as finished statements rather than steps in a process. This expectation distorts both how writing is produced and how it is received, collapsing practice into performance and leaving little room for genuine development.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast18 days ago in Humans
Saltwater and Ashes
Sometimes the sea holds what we cannot. The sea was quiet enough to take me. Not violently. Not in a dramatic, thrashing way. Just quietly — the way grief does. I floated on my back, my ears softened by water, my eyes fixed on the wide, indifferent sky. Birds skimmed low across the surface, their wings almost brushing my face. I was only moments from shore — from my husband, from my boys, from my life. I could have stood up easily. The water was not that deep.
By imtiazalam20 days ago in Humans
The Scale Didn't Change Much
I stood on the bathroom scale for 47 seconds. Not because I was waiting for the number to change—it wouldn't. I was waiting for myself to feel different. The digital display read 184.3. It had read 184.1 three weeks earlier. Same jeans. Same face. Same frustration.
By Edward Smith21 days ago in Humans
Three-stranded braid of failing Cs: Christianity, Capitalism, Consumerism
Scrooge. What a word. Invented by Charles Dickens back in the 1840's as the name for his deplorably wealthy antagonist in the story "A Christmas Carol". Now, in modern English, a Scrooge is a miserly, greedy "person" who deprioritizes actual people in order to better fixate on money.
By Sam Spinelli25 days ago in Humans
You Ate What?
What did you say? You ate what? We have been consumed with modern technology. Every week it seems there is some new innovation to consider. Never has it been more imperative to take a step back and revisit what we are dealing with, because everything has a consequence, good or bad.
By Alexandra Grant25 days ago in Humans
Facebook is Dead. Runner-Up in A System That Isn’t Working Challenge. Top Story - February 2026.
Or at least it feels like it's dead, doesn’t it? Any system that is not maintained and improved but simply left to its own devices, will enter a stage of entropy (natural, slow decay, degradation, and dilapidation) and eventually die.
By Lana V Lynx25 days ago in Humans
Falling Between Every System
Modern social systems are often described as safety nets. Employment law protects workers. Healthcare programs provide treatment. Disability benefits replace lost income. Unemployment insurance bridges job loss. Each system is presented as a safeguard designed to catch people when life disrupts their ability to function normally. Yet for many people living with disability, chronic illness, or injury, the lived experience is the opposite. Rather than forming a net, these systems stack vertically, each with its own eligibility rules, thresholds, and assumptions. Instead of catching the fall, they create gaps. People do not slip through because they failed to try. They fall because the systems were never designed to align.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast26 days ago in Humans
American Dream is Broken
For much of the 20th century, the United States was associated with a broad and stable middle class. Rising wages, home ownership, accessible higher education, and stable employment formed the backbone of what was often referred to as “the American Dream.” The idea was that if you work hard, play by the rules, and save for the future, you will achieve success and build a good life for yourself and your children.
By Lana V Lynx26 days ago in Humans









