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Journal featured post. A corporate culture and workplace favorite.
When “Perfect” Writing Becomes Suspicious. AI-Generated.
The first time someone called my writing “too clean,” I thought it was a compliment. The sentences were tight. The logic flowed. Nothing tripped the reader. Yet the comment came with hesitation, not praise. It suggested distance. Something polished enough to feel slightly unreal. That reaction has become more common, and it says a lot about how our idea of good writing has shifted.
By Karen Coveyabout a month ago in Journal
2026: The dumpster is already on fire.
One month in and I'm over it. If you live anywhere with the internet or you exist in a society(??), then you know the past year or so has been nothing but pure shit. It seems like the world is experiencing mass psychosis, and we are closing our eyes and hoping things will fix themselves. Now, I am no conspiracy theorist. In fact, I'm the complete opposite, but I can't help but wonder what the fuck is in our water.
By Ejay Anderson-Smithabout a month ago in Journal
Gen Z vs Millennials: Generational Shifts in the Europe Cosmetics Market
The beauty industry in Europe is currently undergoing a seismic transformation, driven by the distinct habits of two powerful demographics. As brands navigate the Europe cosmetics market, they must reconcile the impulsive, ethics-driven demands of Gen Z with the research-heavy, wellness-focused preferences of Millennials. Understanding these nuances is no longer optional; it is essential for survival in a highly competitive landscape.
By Joey Mooreabout a month ago in Journal
Dream Log #8
This is one of the latest dreams I’ve had which involves friends, people, location warping and fires. I don’t think it’s as bizarre as some of the other dreams I have had lately, but something still worth writing about. I’ve even been chatting to ChatGPT about my dreams and their responses help me process some of the informatio.
By Chloe Gilholyabout a month ago in Journal
Understanding a U.S. Government Shutdown
A “government shutdown” in the United States sounds like a sci-fi switch someone flipsand suddenly a whole country goes dark. Reality is messier, more legalistic, and (unfortunately) more human: it’s not the nation shutting off, it’s certain federal agencies losing legal authority to spend money, which then ripples into paychecks, services, contracts, and public trust.
By Sayed Zewayedabout a month ago in Journal









