career
Careers in the industry; from corporate to middle management, food service, media, political figures, and beyond. All workplace careers.
What I Learned About Being Seen Online in 2025. AI-Generated.
What I Learned From Starting Something New Hey, let me tell you something. A couple of years ago, I decided to start a small personal project. And honestly? I thought just putting it out there would be enough. I imagined people discovering it, enjoying it, maybe even sharing it. Easy, right?
By Time N Space Media3 months ago in Journal
57 small business ideas for 2026
Small business owners are heading into a year of nonstop change. New tech, shifting workforce expectations, and evolving customer behavior are rewriting the rules. Supply chain disruptions have exposed real gaps, pushing more businesses toward local sourcing, sustainability, and circular models.
By ELIA MWAPINGA3 months ago in Journal
How I.C.E. Shoots Renee Good and the Moment Minneapolis Broke
Sometimes a single bullet does more than tear through glass. Sometimes it shatters trust. On a cold Wednesday morning in south Minneapolis, a maroon SUV sat awkwardly on Portland Avenue. Horns echoed. Whistles pierced the air. Federal vehicles clogged the street like stones dropped into a river. Then came the gunshots — sharp, final, irreversible.
By Omasanjuwa Ogharandukun3 months ago in Journal
Merit-Based Hiring Isn't Just a Slogan:
Introduction Every hiring manager believes they make merit-based decisions. They consider qualifications, experience, and fit. But what they don't see—because it's unconscious—is how small, unrelated details shape their choices long before they evaluate actual skills. A candidate's name, their university, a shared hobby with the interviewer—these trigger snap judgments that override the facts. Many organisations still don’t have consistent systems to catch this, which means bias becomes baked into hiring decisions at scale.
By Amit Kumar3 months ago in Journal
The Gate We All Walk Through
I didn’t realize I’d disappeared until I saw my reflection and didn’t recognize myself. It wasn’t sudden. It was slow—a word silenced here, an opinion softened there, a laugh forced to match the room. I traded pieces of myself for acceptance, like coins dropped into a vending machine that never gave back what I paid for.
By KAMRAN AHMAD3 months ago in Journal
The Keeper of Secrets
I didn’t go in for a book. I went in to escape the rain. It was a gray Tuesday in March, the kind of day that presses down on your chest like a wet blanket. I’d just received news I wasn’t ready for—a job lost, a relationship frayed, the quiet unraveling of plans I’d spent years building. I walked without direction, shoulders hunched, until I saw it: a narrow storefront with a flickering “Open” sign and a window full of leaning paperbacks.
By KAMRAN AHMAD3 months ago in Journal
The Last Game of the Season
I didn’t go for the win. I went because it was the last game. The gym was packed—folding chairs lined the walls, parents stood in the back, and the buzz of nervous energy hung thick in the air. Two rival high schools, decades of history, one championship on the line. But I wasn’t there for the trophy. I was there for my nephew, who’d spent all season riding the bench.
By KAMRAN AHMAD3 months ago in Journal
The Man Who Fixed the Clock
I didn’t notice the clock was broken until it stopped. It sat on the corner shelf of my grandparents’ living room for as long as I could remember—brass, ornate, with Roman numerals and a soft, steady tick that marked the rhythm of every visit. My grandfather wound it every Sunday without fail, even in his nineties, even when his hands shook.
By KAMRAN AHMAD3 months ago in Journal
The Boy Who Carried the Ball Home
I didn’t go to the game for the score. I went because my nephew asked me to. He’s twelve, wears his hair in a messy bun, and talks about basketball like it’s a secret language only he and the ball understand. “It’s not about winning,” he’d said, eyes bright. “It’s about who shows up when it matters.”
By KAMRAN AHMAD3 months ago in Journal
Why Did Eleven Lose Her Powers?
The character of Eleven, who is a telekinesis user, is often referred to as the most powerful in Stranger Things. She has the ability to interact with the physical world using only her mind, to battle monsters, as well as to make portals to different universes.
By Lightbringer 3 months ago in Journal
How People Get Rich Without a Normal Job
The Meme Coin Millionaire You're 16. It's late — the kind of late where you know you'll regret it tomorrow during the first period. You're already in bed, lights off, phone glowing in the dark, when the notification comes through.
By Arsalan Haroon3 months ago in Journal








