Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Humans.
Taylor Lautner: Life Beyond Fame and Growing Up Fast
Fame can arrive quickly, especially in the world of films and global franchises. For some actors, success comes so early that they barely have time to understand it. Taylor Lautner experienced that kind of rise. Millions of people around the world recognized his face before he had fully stepped into adulthood. Known widely for his role in a popular film series, Taylor Lautner became a symbol of youthful strength and loyalty. But behind that image was a young person navigating pressure, expectations, and identity. His journey did not follow the usual path of constant headlines. Instead, it moved quietly through change, reflection, and personal growth. To understand Taylor Lautner today, it helps to look beyond early fame and explore the human story behind it.
By Muqadas khan9 days ago in Humans
Recognizing Green Flags Early Helps Singles Choose Better Romantic Partners
Green flags during dating are good signals that indicated that an individual possesses the qualities that are required to make a relationship healthy and fulfilling. Such indicators are usually honesty, consistency, emotional availability, respect and communication skills. Early identification of these characteristics aids single individuals to center on others who are best suited to have a stable relationship and are capable of it. Rather than merely being on the lookout of red flags, the presence of green flags will promote a proactive mindset to dating where people go out to find positives instead of mere negativity.
By Robert Smith10 days ago in Humans
Green Flags In Healthy Relationships Show Emotional Maturity And Respect
Green flags in relationships are good signs which denote emotional health, compatibility and long-term possibilities. Green flags encourage conduct that promotes trust, communication, and mutual respect compared to red flags, which warn about possible issues. These signs usually contain such aspects as honesty, empathy, consistence, and readiness to develop together. Green flags can be identified at an earlier stage so that people can invest in relationships that are emotionally satisfying and stable. Rather than negatively concentrating on some avoidance patterns, finding positive attributes promotes a more balanced and optimistic attitude towards contemporary dating and relationship creation.
By Robert Smith10 days ago in Humans
Beyond Labels: Unity, Ego, and the Misinterpretation of Soul Identity
Spiritual identity becomes distorted the moment consciousness is viewed through the lens of separation rather than unity. At the highest level, all souls arise from a single source—a unified field of awareness described across mystical traditions as the One Mind, the Original Thought, or the fundamental ground of being. Every spark of consciousness is an expression of this same source, differentiated only for the sake of experience. When this truth is forgotten, the ego begins constructing elaborate narratives to restore a sense of specialness or significance. These narratives often take the form of spiritual hierarchies, cosmic identities, or metaphysical labels that appear meaningful on the surface but ultimately reinforce separation rather than dissolve it.
By Julie O'Hara - Author, Poet and Spiritual Warrior10 days ago in Humans
Is Therapy Right for Me? 7 Signs You’re Ready to Start (Even If You’re Unsure). AI-Generated.
“Do I really need therapy… or am I just reading too much into how I feel?” If that question has ever crossed your mind, you’re not alone. In fact, most people don’t wake up one day and suddenly realise they need therapy. It usually starts as a quiet thought. A small nudge. A feeling you can’t quite explain.
By FELIX PERIGRIE10 days ago in Humans
The Lucky One. Content Warning.
At age 17, I knew what the word 'pedophile' meant. I considered myself book smart, mature for my age; I thought I knew how the world worked because I devoured information like it was needed fuel for my over active imagination and unlimited empathy. After graduating with high grades as a well liked but awkward teen, mainly unseen by those not in my close circle of family and friends, I was thirsty for knowledge and in need of a new era. When I actually got involved with a pedophile during my first year in university, though, the thought never really occurred that this man was pursuing me, not as a suitor but as a predator stalking their next meal. Dan was 42.
By Alycen Sparrow10 days ago in Humans
Karmic Bonds, Sacred Bonds, and the Trap of Ego
A spiritually grounded life collapses the moment we start interpreting our relationships through the lens of ego. The ego wants to be special, chosen, justified, superior, or vindicated. It wants to believe that every intense connection is destiny and every painful one is someone else’s fault. But the soul has no interest in any of that. The soul is concerned with growth, repair, and evolution. When we confuse karmic relationships with sacred ones, or when we elevate ourselves above the lessons we are meant to learn, we interrupt the very process that was designed to free us.
By Julie O'Hara - Author, Poet and Spiritual Warrior10 days ago in Humans
Karmic Imbalance, Soul Contracts, and the True Nature of Limerence
Human relationships do not arise out of coincidence or emotional whim. They unfold within a larger architecture of karmic patterning, soul agreements, and energetic exchanges that precede this lifetime. Many spiritual and philosophical traditions describe this architecture in different language, but the underlying principle is consistent: the soul enters each incarnation with a set of lessons, debts, and developmental tasks that shape the relationships it attracts. The Bhagavad Gita refers to this as the soul’s dharma, the path of necessary experience that cannot be avoided without creating further imbalance (Easwaran, 2007). Kabbalistic teachings describe it as tikkun, the soul’s repair work, the unfinished business that must be addressed for the soul to evolve (Berg, 2004). Jungian psychology, though secular, echoes the same principle through the concept of the unconscious task, the inner work that draws us toward certain people and situations until the lesson is integrated (Jung, 1959). These frameworks differ in language but converge in meaning: relationships are not random. They are purposeful.
By Julie O'Hara - Author, Poet and Spiritual Warrior10 days ago in Humans
Managed, Not Healed
For people living with chronic pain, the most destabilizing realization is not that healing is difficult. It is that healing is often not the goal. The healthcare system that surrounds them is built to manage symptoms, document persistence, and ration interventions rather than pursue restoration of function. Over time, patients begin to notice a pattern. Short-acting medications are readily available. Repeated appointments are routine. Imaging is reviewed, notes are written, and pain is acknowledged. Yet interventions aimed at resolving underlying structural problems, restoring stability, or preventing long-term degeneration are delayed, denied, or classified as optional. The system responds continuously, but it rarely moves forward.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast10 days ago in Humans










