advice
Dating, married, single, divorced, and more. Advice on the relationships you have in life. Dear, Humans..
Finding Love
Now you have decided that you are ready to date, and you are trying to find somewhere to meet that special person. So, where do you go? How do you find that person that will sweep you off your feet? The answers to these questions won't be the same for everyone.
By Nicole Higginbotham-Hogueabout a month ago in Humans
Communication is Key
Once you find someone that you are interested in, take the time to get to know him or her. Talk about the things that you want out of life and see if your goals line up. Also, talk about your expectations when it comes to a relationship. Let the other person know what you want to get out of a relationship and listen to what he or she wants as well. See if your wants and needs line up. If they don't, consider whether moving forward with the other person would be an additive to your life or if it would bring you farther away from the things that you want and need.
By Nicole Higginbotham-Hogueabout a month ago in Humans
The Lie That Love Knows Best. AI-Generated.
Love is the easiest word to manipulate. Parents, partners, friends — everyone wields it like a compass, a rulebook, even a justification for control. “I only want what’s best for you,” they say. And because you care, because you want to belong, because you want to avoid conflict, you listen. You follow. You compromise.
By Fault Linesabout a month ago in Humans
The Silence is Not Health: The Structural Cost of Moralised Pain
I. Executive Summary I would like to present theoretical and empirical synthesis concerning the systemic failure of modern pain management. It argues that chronic physical pain is a biological fact that cannot be thought away through cognitive reframing. By utilising a framework of Regulation Architecture, I demonstrate how current medical demands for acceptance force subjects into a state of resignation and learned helplessness. This silence is not health. It is a trauma response that masks a total collapse of structural integrity. By integrating neuroimaging data and allostatic load theory, this paper calls for a shift from policing emotional reactions to providing functional, biologically grounded relief.
By Claire McAllenabout a month ago in Humans
Training the Brain in Spite of A.I.
While A.I. is being shoved down our throats, it's more important than ever to keep our minds sharp the old fashioned way. Letting a machine think for you might be tempting at first. How many times have you heard, "Work smarter, not harder," in reference to letting A.I. handle a report at work. Sounds innocent enough. But don't get carried away because let's remember that machine learning has its flaws.
By Leslie Writesabout a month ago in Humans
“The Nights That Almost Broke Me Became the Mornings That Built Me”
There was a time when my biggest fear was not failure — it was tomorrow. Every morning began with calculations. How much money was left? Could I afford transport today? Should I buy food or save it for printing notes? These questions followed me everywhere like a shadow.
By hamad khanabout a month ago in Humans
The Morning Routine That Finally Stopped My Anxiety
I used to wake up tired… but not because I didn’t sleep. I woke up with anxiety. Before my eyes even opened, my mind was already running. Deadlines. Messages. Expectations. Regrets. What I didn’t finish yesterday. What could go wrong today.
By Dadullah Danishabout a month ago in Humans







