Writing Exercise
The Suitcase of Forgotten Goodbyes
The Suitcase of Forgotten Goodbyes The airport always smelled faintly of jet fuel, floor wax, and coffee. For Lena, it was the scent of routine, of isolation wrapped in fluorescent light. She had worked as a janitor at Terminal B for nearly fifteen years, pushing her cart of cleaning supplies past gates, food courts, and duty-free shops. No one really noticed her. That was part of the job—being invisible.
By waseem khan9 months ago in Writers
The Whispers in Room 313
The Whispers in Room 313 By Octavia Birthfield The first time Kayla heard the whisper, she thought it was the wind. She had just checked into the Willowridge Inn, a crumbling, nearly forgotten hotel tucked away in a small town off the interstate. Her car had broken down, and it was the only place with vacancy.
By Taviii🇨🇦♐️9 months ago in Writers
My Experience Using the New ChatGPT Logo Generator
Creating a quality company logo is one of the most important aspects of branding a business. However, designing a unique, fitting logo may be both difficult and time-consuming. The ChatGPT Logo Generator is a tool that aims to alleviate this challenge, by combining AI with user inputs to generate custom logos.
By Lindsay Liang9 months ago in Writers
Impacting Others, Happy or Brilliant, and Huggers. Top Story - July 2025.
Gregory Stock’s The Book of Questions prompt — Do you feel you have much impact on the lives of people you come in contact with? Can you think of someone who, over a short period of time, significantly influenced your life?
By Denise E Lindquist9 months ago in Writers
The Hidden Power Behind Price Tags: How Psychological Pricing Drives Buying Behavior
Imagine walking into a store and seeing a price tag that reads $9.99 instead of a clean $10. Almost instinctively, you feel like you’re getting a better deal—even though the difference is just a penny.
By PriceIntelGuru9 months ago in Writers
Inside the Occupation
As a young kid I watched a show on TV, a semblance of Deal or No Deal, and concluded that I wanted to become an economist just like the young girl that confidently won the show and left everyone in awe with her intelligence and wit. I was just 12. To me, becoming an economist meant being smart, young, witty. Winning games on televised shows and walking off with the stack of cash kind of a witty.
By Narghiza Ergashova9 months ago in Writers




