humanity
For better or for worse, relationships reveal the core of the human condition.
Across the Ages of the Self: How the Soul Learns Through Time
There are ideas that arrive softly, like a whisper brushing the edge of consciousness, and others that land with the weight of recognition—as though they were always known, waiting only for language to catch up. The understanding that our incarnations on Earth unfold across vast arcs of time, spanning roughly 2,500 years of experiential learning, belongs to the latter category. It is not a doctrine, not a dogma, not a rigid metaphysical map. It is a framework that resonates across mystical traditions, ancient cosmologies, and modern spiritual inquiry. It is a way of understanding the soul’s long journey through matter, time, and choice.
By Julie O'Hara - Author, Poet and Spiritual Warrior8 days ago in Humans
The Demons We Invent: Ego, Free Will, and the Illusion of Darkness
For as long as human beings have been able to name their fears, we have created shapes to hold them. Every culture, every religion, every era has produced its own vocabulary for the unseen forces that trouble the mind and unsettle the heart. In the ancient world, these forces were often personified as demons—malevolent beings who whispered temptation, sowed chaos, and preyed upon the vulnerable. But as our understanding of psychology, consciousness, and spiritual agency has deepened, a different picture has begun to emerge. The demons we fear may not be external entities at all. They may be projections of our own ego, born from the parts of ourselves we refuse to acknowledge, the consequences of our choices, and the destruction our free will has caused. When we follow divine will, these demons dissolve, not because they have been defeated, but because they were never real in the first place. They were shadows cast by our own resistance to truth.
By Julie O'Hara - Author, Poet and Spiritual Warrior8 days ago in Humans
Love Between Two Enemies Part Two
Lines Drawn in Blood --- PART TWO – LINES DRAWN IN BLOOD Some wars were loud. They came with shouting, gunfire, headlines splashed across newspapers. Others were quieter—waged in boardrooms, whispered threats, contracts signed in ink that carried more poison than blood.
By Ahmed aldeabella8 days ago in Humans
Love Between Two Enemies Part One
THE WAR WE INHERITED New York had a way of pretending it had no memory. Skyscrapers rose where scandals once burned, cafés thrived where blood had been spilled in boardrooms, and families like the Ashfords and the Morettis wore their success like polished armor, hiding decades of hatred beneath tailored suits.
By Ahmed aldeabella8 days ago in Humans
The Age of Faux Victimhood: Why the Beckham Story Strikes a Nerve
The unfolding public rift between Brooklyn Beckham, his wife Nicola Peltz, and the Beckham family has become more than a celebrity feud splashed across headlines. It has evolved into a cultural mirror, reflecting a generational pattern that many families—famous or not—are now confronting. What began as a series of cryptic social media posts and tabloid whispers has grown into a full‑blown estrangement, with Brooklyn declaring he has no desire to reconcile with his parents and accusing them of manipulation, sabotage, and emotional harm. His statements, amplified by the presence and influence of his wife, have been framed as a young couple “standing up for themselves,” but the deeper story reveals something far more familiar and far more troubling: the rise of a demographic of young adults who have been conditioned to interpret discomfort as abuse, boundaries as oppression, and ordinary family conflict as justification for permanent exile. The Beckham saga is not just celebrity drama—it is a teaching story for all of us, a case study in entitlement, emotional immaturity, and the corrosive influence of partners who encourage estrangement rather than healing.
By Julie O'Hara - Author, Poet and Spiritual Warrior8 days ago in Humans
Insecure People Try to Make Other People Insecure
Many insecure people cause other people to be insecure. How do they do this exactly? Insecure people can be very critical. Deep down inside, I think they feel the weight of their own insecurities, so they try to distract themselves by being critical of others. In a way, the spotlight is cast on others for just a little while, so that it eases the insecure person’s spinning anxieties.
By Rowan Finley 8 days ago in Humans
Are you a weed or a pretty plant ?
one and a half years ago my now ex-boyfriend and I had a really intersting conversation. It was a conversation after or First hege fight and at that moment I felt completely lost .So in the middle of this fight and trying to figure out where we misunderstood each other he said : “ look you are like this weed “ while pointing at it . “ It doesn’t matter how the ground is. You still decide to grow there and you are ambitious to make things work. I am like the plant over there . My ground is good ans it doesn’t really matter what I do- some things are more easy for me even if I don‘t have a plan or a goal“.
By _ lilinana9 days ago in Humans
The Quiet Hero of Your Loved One’s Day: Why Companion Care Matters
From loneliness to missed medication to declining mobility, small daily struggles can quickly add up. This is where companion care steps in, not just as support but as a stabilizing presence in a senior’s day.
By Lola Gold Finch9 days ago in Humans










