feature
Humans featured post, a Humans Media favorite.
By the Arch of Our Backs. Winner in A System That Isn’t Working Challenge.
A speaker uses a phrase passed around in failed relationships, to gain equal footing in his headship with us. Peasants. While we are still at his feet. He asks, “What do you bring to the table?” To you as a wise citizen, I say you bring your experience. Not just for your job, but for these treacherous speeches. I don’t bring my feelings, I get even with his eloquence.
By Caitlin Charltonabout a month ago in Humans
Catching Fish
Anyone who fishes, knows, there is an art to catching fish. You need the right environment and weather, the right, bait or lure, and a bit of wisdom and finesse, in the way you cast out. It’s an art really. Not everyone can catch fish, and be good at it. Then there is the whole question of ethics.
By Alexandra Grantabout a month ago in Humans
The One Habit That Quietly Changed My Entire Life
There are many habits people talk about waking up at 5 AM, journaling, meditation, exercising daily, reading books, cold showers, and more. I tried many of them. Some worked, some didn’t. But there is one habit that quietly changed my entire life, and surprisingly, it is not something dramatic or trendy.
By Sathish Kumar about a month ago in Humans
Rev. Dr. Louise Goben on Interfaith Hunger Relief: Dignity, Golden Rule Partnerships, and Food Pantry Impact
Rev. Dr. Louise Goben is President of the North Hollywood Interfaith Food Pantry and has volunteered with the pantry almost since its inception. With her family, she spent decades transporting food from Temple Beth Hillel to distribution at First Christian Church, strengthening a practical Jewish–Christian partnership against hunger in the San Fernando Valley. Ordained in the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), she is retired from active congregational ministry but still preaches and teaches Bible when invited. She also teaches World Religion and History of Religion through the Encore Program at Los Angeles Pierce College. Her work centers on dignity.
By Scott Douglas Jacobsenabout a month ago in Humans
Too Young for Rectal Cancer? A Growing Number of Americans Aren’t
For years, rectal cancer carried an unspoken label. It was something that happened later. Something tied to aging, retirement, and routine screenings that began after fifty. Younger bodies, we believed, were largely spared.
By Aarsh Malikabout a month ago in Humans
Gen Z Is No Longer Getting their Driver’s License
For decades, learning how to drive was a rite of passage. Turning 16 meant freedom, independence, and your first taste of adulthood behind the wheel. But something has shifted. A growing number of young people — especially Gen Z — are delaying getting their driver’s licenses or skipping it entirely. Instead, they’re tapping a screen, booking an Uber, and letting someone else handle the road.
By AnthonyBTVabout a month ago in Humans
Paying Rent Pandemic
Why do I have to pay a monthly rent to buy something at a fair price? I can’t for the life of me imagine how this makes any sense. If you want my dollars, you post your goods and I’ll buy them, if they are priced well and of good quality.
By Alexandra Grantabout a month ago in Humans
Who Is Sanae Takaichi?
Sanae Takaichi is the first female Prime Minister of Japan, having taken office on October 21, 2025, and subsequently securing a landslide victory in a snap election on February 8, 2026. As a high-ranking member of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), she is recognized as a staunch conservative and a security hawk, often referred to as a protege of the late former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.
By Omasanjuwa Ogharandukunabout a month ago in Humans
Lindsey Vonn’s Last Olympic Descent: Why She Said She’d “Already Won” Before the Crash That Shook Milano Cortina 2026
When Lindsey Vonn clicked into her skis at the top of the mountain in Cortina d’Ampezzo, the moment felt less like the start of a race and more like the closing chapter of an epic novel. Snow dusted the peaks like punctuation marks, the crowd buzzed with expectation, and history waited downhill. Just 13 seconds later, it all unraveled.
By Omasanjuwa Ogharandukunabout a month ago in Humans







