Writing

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fromwww.theguardian.com
5 hours ago

Impossible, exhausting, horrifying': how a chilling supernatural play explains the terror of life in Iran

If angels are good and devils are evil, the theatre and film director remembers learning, then the djinn is something in between. As a child, she asked her grandmother what that really meant. It means, she was told, that bad things happen to good people.
Writing
Writing
fromItsnicethat
2 hours ago

Trevor Small works through his brain injury with the ultimate art therapy: embroidery

A severe brain injury led to relearning daily skills and developing a successful textiles practice focused on horses through stitching and embroidery.
Writing
fromjeffbullas.com
1 day ago

The Human Signal Manifesto in the AI Age - jeffbullas.com

Creation driven by human curiosity and real connection builds global readership without optimization or algorithms.
Writing
fromAnOther
21 hours ago

Lauren Elkin's New Book Explores Singing as a Vessel for Feminism and Power

Women’s singing has long been treated as both power and threat, with cultural systems punishing, fearing, or silencing vocal expression.
fromItsnicethat
1 day ago

Vinca Petersen's new photo series on the Isle of Skye is "an invitation to imagine an alternative future"

What the book does is capture an irrepressible intimacy that often goes unseen in the retelling of rave culture. Vinca's photographs of Big Nick reading to the kids, Harry cooking dinner or Carol trying to sort out the living room are perhaps her most radical. They describe the reparative gestures that went on behind the scenes that cultivated a sense of unity, interdependence and belonging within the group.
Writing
fromVulture
1 day ago

Widow's Bay Recap: The Terrors Will Not Cease

This week's episode, "Our History," a flashback to 1702 and Sarah Westcott Warren's arrival in Widow's Bay, provides some clarity. It seems obvious now that the man with the long hair at the beginning of "What to Expect on Your Trip" is Richard Warren, portrayed by Hamish Linklater, and that what we witnessed was his arrival on the island and his discovery of the funnest fungi in fungi history.
Writing
Writing
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

For Me, Fomo Isn't About Missing Out

FOMO drives social anxiety, but introversion prefers limited, intimate time with friends over noisy group events.
fromwww.npr.org
1 day ago

If you attend a David Sedaris reading, you're helping him edit

“I love attention,” he says of going on tour. “I love going on stage and I love people applauding, love people laughing.” But reading out loud isn't just about adoration. Sedaris says he's always listening for reactions from the crowd and tweaking his work in response. “The audience is my first editor,” he says. “When they cough, they tell me that I need to cut whatever it is that I'm reading. Of course, when they laugh, that's fantastic. But I don't mind a groan. A collective groan is fine with me.”
Writing
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

The Vivisectors by Missouri Williams review twisted love story from a cult writer

A cynical narrator confronts family collapse and institutional power struggles as a university town is overtaken by violent, sentient-like vegetation.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Saint Levant: the pop star from Gaza caught between passionate fandom and bitter disapproval

A Palestinian Arab Francophone pop artist gained viral fame with trilingual, sexually frank dating lyrics amid rapidly changing realities in Gaza and Sudan.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Tess Jaray obituary

Creating space shapes identity and protection, and abstract painting can evoke architecture through geometric, movement-suggestive forms.
#grief
fromBuzzFeed
3 days ago
Writing

I Lost My Mom As A Child, But Her Deathbed Confession Still Haunts Me To This Day

fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago
Writing

People say there are no words, but there are thousands': Liz Lawrence on making a new kind of grief album after her sister's death

fromPsychology Today
1 week ago
Writing

Crafting a Relationship With Loss

Loss makes what is taken visible and what is given hard to see, requiring peace with change and love beyond permanence.
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago
Writing

Stories Save: An Interview With Emily Rapp Black

Grief is universal, and creative expression helps people process loss, feel less alone, and make space for changing emotions over time.
Writing
fromBuzzFeed
3 days ago

I Lost My Mom As A Child, But Her Deathbed Confession Still Haunts Me To This Day

Mother’s Day can force grief into a soft, pretty performance that leaves little space for anger and complicated loss.
Writing
fromTiny Buddha
6 days ago

The Small, Unexpected Ways Grief Stays with Us - Tiny Buddha

Grief lasts forever, and love learned through daily routines continues through how people live with loss.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

People say there are no words, but there are thousands': Liz Lawrence on making a new kind of grief album after her sister's death

Vespers is a stripped-back folk grief album built around open, frank sadness for Liz Lawrence’s sister Jessie.
Writing
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Crafting a Relationship With Loss

Loss makes what is taken visible and what is given hard to see, requiring peace with change and love beyond permanence.
Writing
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

Stories Save: An Interview With Emily Rapp Black

Grief is universal, and creative expression helps people process loss, feel less alone, and make space for changing emotions over time.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

From vulva scarves to Prince Andrew 10 of the Guardian's most memorable Pass Notes

Pass Notes uses an age-first format to structure brief, topical Q&A, preserving fleeting trends and enabling writers to be both pedantic and playful.
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Written under collapsing ceilings, typed on phones: the poetry bringing Palestine to the world

Poetry may not be the best response to aerial bombardment, but for many Palestinians it has become a line of defence amid the rubble and ongoing killings in Gaza. Poetry keeps hope alive. Even in the darkest moments, Palestinian poetry continues to imagine a future, Nazmi al-Masri, professor of languages at the Islamic University of Gaza, says at an online poetry event held by his students. Poetry gives people a language to express collective grief, he says.
Writing
Writing
fromAnOther
3 days ago

This Haunting Book Resureccts the Voices of Forgotten Psychiatric Patients

Women’s histories in derelict institutions can be recovered through archives, revealing lives shaped by loss, violence, and systems that contain them.
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

The Healing Power of Poetry

Poetry therapy is often used nowadays in mental health settings for healing and growth. Patients read and write poetry to find new ways of being mindful or relaxed. Poetry can point to the work they can do on themselves. Poetry can open them to new ways of coping. A poem can lead safely into realms of the unconscious that might be frightening ordinarily. Poems open the imagination to see alternatives to the status quo or to chronic suffering. In fact, every poem takes us into a parallel universe.
Writing
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

From Gilead to Ladyland: how the rebellious women of literature offer hope in dark times

Banishanta is a state-licensed brothel island in southern Bangladesh, and a novel uses fictional women’s rebellion to imagine liberation and survival.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

The kindness of strangers: I was a broke youth radio host who couldn't afford a Beck ticket then a listener called in

A stranger bought an 18th-birthday ticket to Beck after hearing a radio segment, leaving only a card and no further request.
Writing
fromRoger Ebert
4 days ago

Cannes 2026: Everytime, Ben'Imana, Titanic Ocean

Everytime and other Un Certain Regard works use complex grief, history, and dreams to create bold, haunting, indelible cinematic experiences.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

I thought I was the saviour of the planet': how Game of Thrones' Hannah Murray found a wellness cult and lost her mind

A weekly surge of joy comes from no longer acting, driven by relief from objectification, scrutiny, and the exhausting cycle of auditions and fame.
Writing
fromThe Nation
5 days ago

GLP-1s and the Limits of Knowing Better

A magic pasta pot causes a flood, but the story’s real effect is envy and reflection on food scarcity and weight anxiety.
Writing
fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

Why It Still Hurts: The Wound Beneath the Wound

Humans heal through close, compassionate holding; when people move past wounds too quickly, trauma lingers and deepens.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

Keeping my dead wife's books safe for our son helped me let go of guilt | Ben O'Mara

Guilt after a spouse’s death can overwhelm daily actions, but self-forgiveness and professional support can help it lessen over time.
Writing
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

Why We Write Poems After Heartbreak

Heartbreak disrupts attachment, expectations, identity, and meaning, and ordinary language often cannot capture its contradictions and emotional complexity.
fromArchitectural Digest
5 days ago

You're Never Too Old for Summer Camp

Even in my begrudging tenure, I couldn't discount the distinct sense of community wrought by summer camp: the belonging that comes from being outside, unplugged, semi-unregulated, among perfect strangers. A handful of Hudson Valley properties are now selling that same feeling with one significant upgrade: You don't have to share a bunk.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

I want to hit 100': Derek Jacobi on Aids, ageing and failing to boil an egg

Derek Jacobi is chatting to the photographer in the living room. His voice is unmistakeable rich, buttered, every sentence beautifully parsed and phrased. I'm in the kitchen with his husband, Richard Clifford, who is making coffee. He tells me they have been together 47 years. We met when I was 22 and he was 39. I'm a child snatcher, guffaws Jacobi from the lounge.
Writing
Writing
fromAnOther
1 week ago

Artist Kandis Williams on Fairy Tales

Black womanhood is shaped by colonial and media images, producing fetishism and exclusion, and fairy tales can transform lived experiences into new quests and stories.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Care review this searing portrayal of dementia raises urgent questions for us all

Elderly residents in a locked dementia ward experience profound loneliness caused by a system that strips autonomy and connection.
fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
1 week ago

Shine on: 'The Pavilion' is a showcase for stellar performances * Oregon ArtsWatch

Naturalistic acting is a must in the tiny Southeast Portland space, where the 30-plus audience members sit so close to the stage that one false, blatantly theatrical note could spoil the whole show. Instead, director Jonathan Hoonhout and his actors hold us close to this emotional story set in Pine City, Minnesota, where a 20-year high school reunion is taking place at the 100-year-old lakeside pavilion.
Writing
fromBig Think
1 week ago

The Dali trick: The strange psychology of becoming who you want to be

“Hey mate, what's your name? What are you here to study? Cool, cool. Fancy a drink?” Ben was an archetype. He was an artsy, romantic sort who wore loose knitwear and an Alibaba scarf he'd bought from a souk in Morocco. Authentically Bedouin, handmad e.
Writing
Writing
fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

Why the Best Writing Advice Is Often the Weirdest

Writing becomes interesting by developing character through habitual gestures, ethical traits, quirks, and story presence.
Writing
fromScary Mommy
1 week ago

Women Are Taking "Why-Cations" To Find Themselves, So I Tried One

Why-cations are short trips taken for emotional relief, helping people rest, reconnect, and feel meaningful during burnout, grief, or major transitions.
Writing
fromDefector
1 week ago

Wasia Can Be A Lot. It's Fine. | Defector

A misperceived identity led to changing a byline, and later acceptance shifted focus from proving race to living well.
Writing
fromThe Nation
1 week ago

The Magical, Mysterious World of Archives

Archives and document collections determine how effectively historical research and storytelling can be done.
Writing
fromIntelligencer
1 week ago

Why the Amish Are Falling in Love With AI

Generative AI is being used by an Amish family to draft a Valentine, blending modern tools with traditional life.
Writing
fromDefector
1 week ago

Daniel Radcliffe Will Talk You Off The Ledge | Defector

Audience participation in Every Brilliant Thing works smoothly on Broadway, even with Daniel Radcliffe, creating a genuine experience rather than a gimmick.
#acting
Writing
fromEsquire
1 week ago

Adeline Rudolph Is in Her Badass Heroine Era

Adeline Rudolph transitioned from journalism dreams and political science studies into screen acting, now starring as Princess Kitana in Mortal Kombat II.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Frailty and terrible rage': Linda Bassett on Call the Midwife, her crap-free CV and selling ice creams at Olivier's Old Vic

Acting provides education in human feelings and frailty, and inhabiting a writer’s words creates audience impact through distilled, non-excess performance choices.
Writing
fromEsquire
1 week ago

Adeline Rudolph Is in Her Badass Heroine Era

Adeline Rudolph transitioned from journalism dreams and political science studies into screen acting, now starring as Princess Kitana in Mortal Kombat II.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Frailty and terrible rage': Linda Bassett on Call the Midwife, her crap-free CV and selling ice creams at Olivier's Old Vic

Acting provides education in human feelings and frailty, and inhabiting a writer’s words creates audience impact through distilled, non-excess performance choices.
Writing
fromIrish Independent
1 week ago

Makiko Nakamura: 'Justice is something very private, very quiet. Each person carries their own sense of it'

Layered oil paintings built from basic colors and repeated geometric forms are shaped through sanding to create a distinctive process influenced by Beckett and Robert Ryman.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Caroline Aherne by David Scott review portrait of a comedy maverick

Caroline Aherne’s work used ordinary life and blunt humor to create subtly subversive British television characters and performances.
Writing
fromwww.cbc.ca
1 week ago

Flavia de Luce mystery writer Alan Bradley dead at age 87 | CBC Books

Alan Bradley died at 87 on the Isle of Man, leaving behind the Flavia de Luce mystery series and a late-life writing breakthrough.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Offseason by Avigayl Sharp review wry comedy of a frazzled teacher

A literature teacher’s fragile mind, trauma, and obsession collide with entitled students and bleak reading assignments in a deadpan, wry novel.
Writing
fromTiny Buddha
1 week ago

My Father Taught Me Love Is Something You Earn; He Was Wrong - Tiny Buddha

Closure comes from within, and peace cannot be obtained by confronting someone who betrayed you.
Writing
fromwww.bustle.com
1 week ago

How Mindy Kaling Flipped The Script On Her Life

A comedy writer’s office reflects a life shaped by early romance expectations, career artifacts, and a family timeline that diverged from her original plan.
Writing
fromwww.npr.org
1 week ago

In the face of devastating loss, Jesmyn Ward holds onto 'respair'

Dorothy’s twin’s stillbirth and prophetic birth story shaped Ward’s writing, blending trauma with magic and ferocity, and her later grief led to “respair.”
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

America's Mona Lisa': how chance, genius and cheap paint made the masterpiece Whistler's Mother

Whistler’s Mother became a global icon, returning to London after nearly two generations as part of a Tate Britain Whistler exhibition.
Writing
fromRaymondcamden
1 week ago

My First AI Skill for My Blog

Use generative AI to improve content quality by assisting with titles, metadata descriptions, spelling/grammar, and identifying missing topic aspects without writing full drafts.
Writing
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

The Word I Don't Have for What AI Has Done to My Work

More precise naming of feelings predicts regulation success, while AI-assisted work can evoke feelings workplace language cannot yet capture.
Writing
fromTiny Buddha
1 week ago

What Helped Me Heal from a Breakup and Create a Life I Love - Tiny Buddha

Facing one fear each month for a year reveals fear’s control and builds resilience through deliberate action.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

My rookie era: In my 30s, I went for my driver's licence test and failed four times

Last year, at the age of 35, I decided it was time to grow up and get my driver's licence. I had considered it before, but it had never stuck. As a teenager, I thought driving was scary and significantly less cool than sitting on the bus, listening to the same eight songs on my MP3 player. As a news reporter in my 20s, not driving was inconvenient to both me and my editors, but so was spending days off learning how to parallel park.
Writing
fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

Can Mozart and Salieri Work It Out?

Nearby were manuscripts of nine symphonies that Mozart wrote within two years, in his late teens. Bettany snapped photos. "My son's a composer"-Stellan Connelly Bettany, his older child with the actress Jennifer Connelly, is at the Royal College of Music-"and he's only written one symphony this year!"
Writing
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Got!': Panini 1970 World Cup sticker book completed after 56 years

A long-stored 1970 Panini World Cup sticker book was completed after nearly 60 years, becoming valuable but kept by its collector.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

The hantavirus debacle raises a key question: why would anyone go on a cruise? | Dave Schilling

Cruise travel can become dangerous during outbreaks, prompting evacuations, quarantines, and restricted disembarkation to limit virus transmission.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Flying Lotus: People kept saying, You can't make hip-hop with a laptop. Those comments were my fuel'

What's the best gift you ever received? Honestly, probably a Chucky doll. It was an authentic Chucky doll from Child's Play 2. My girlfriend at the time gave it to me for Christmas or my birthday, like two years ago? I always wanted one of those stupid things, and I got it. I don't know how she found it. I saw those films in the 90s. I probably shouldn't have, but my mom was a horror fan and she likes weird movies, so she always freaked me out when I was a kid.
Writing
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

A man's search for his daughter's killer, the secrets to spotting a liar and what is hot divorcee energy?

A series of investigative and cultural pieces covers justice efforts, divorce culture, imprisoned activism, deception detection, and nuclear risk.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

It didn't seem real': the Black mushroom hunters unearthing the US's essential fungi

It was the first time Pinto was enthralled by a mushroom — the American yellow fly agaric, a poisonous fungus that is relatively common where Pinto lives in Massachusetts. It forced me down on my knees to examine it further, because it didn't look real, Pinto, a naturalist and writer, said. It looked like it was from another dimension. On that day in 2013, she captured the mushroom from dozens of angles on her phone.
Writing
Writing
fromDefector
1 week ago

Consider The Sister | Defector

Siblings turned TV cartoons into interactive, improvised performances that shaped lasting sensory memories and challenged later stereotypes about a writer’s life.
Writing
fromApartment Therapy
1 week ago

I Learned the Hidden Meaning of Each Birth Flower, and It's Transformed How I Gift

Birth month flowers carry culturally specific meanings, often shaped by Western and Victorian traditions, and color variations add further emotional nuance.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 weeks ago

The Correspondent by Virginia Evans review immensely enjoyable return of the epistolary novel

A modern epistolary novel succeeds by using letters to create emotional depth, character contradiction, and forward motion across years.
Writing
fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

The Origins of Alcohol as a Muse

Alcohol use became linked to the creative process through recurring stories of writers drinking while working or seeking inspiration.
Writing
fromThe Nation
2 weeks ago

AI Is Incapable of Poetry

Large language models trained on copyrighted works can produce derivative, mediocre creative output while raising plagiarism and ethical concerns.
Writing
fromSlate Magazine
2 weeks ago

My Father's Hidden Life Was in a Box in His Office. By the Time I Found It, It Was Almost Too Late.

A historian’s most important work was preserved through urgent evacuation, later revealing plans for a companion book and his major scholarly impact.
Writing
fromHigh Country News
2 weeks ago

The Southwest's superbloom was a beautiful nightmare - High Country News

Desert Southwest blooms out of season, turning seasonal expectations into a prolonged, climate-driven “forever spring” that demands finding ways to live with disruption.
Writing
fromIndependent
2 weeks ago

Sophie White: 'Nothing triggers a nervous breakdown faster than someone replying to a text with a single thumbs up'

A mother’s serious question on the Luas leads to a humorous, self-aware exploration of generational expectations and personal anxieties.
Writing
fromAnOther
2 weeks ago

Five Books That Shaped Marilyn Monroe

Marilyn Monroe’s library reveals wide-ranging reading interests that illuminate her curiosity, relationships with writers, and pursuit of deeper dramatic roles.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 weeks ago

It smells like my ranch!' Diva of dirt Delcy Morelos and her amazing 30-tonne earthworks

The earth's cool breath is the first thing that hits me. Scented with clove and cinnamon, it catches my senses by surprise in the dim, while a vast soil sculpture emerges around me as if from a dream, just as the artist intended. I'm contained within its mammoth, terraced walls of reddish soil and struck by the silence, the peace felt in being held by nothing but earth.
Writing
Writing
fromwww.npr.org
2 weeks ago

Acclaimed author Sara Novic chats about her new memoir, 'Mother Tongue'

Losing hearing reshaped language, community, and parenting, with music becoming a vibration-based form of connection and identity.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 weeks ago

Vocal Break by Lauren Elkin review a celebration of the female voice

When Lauren Elkin was a child, she took lessons with a voice teacher in Northport, Long Island, who would get her to perform in front of a mirror. Singing songs from the Italian classical repertoire, Elkin who was a soprano was required to smile and lift up her eyebrows as she sang since it helps with placement. She was told her breathing should come not from the chest but the diaphragm, and that she must smooth over the vocal break, which is where the chest voice changes into the head voice.
Writing
fromVulture
2 weeks ago

Hayden Panettiere Did Not 'Just Give Up' her Daughter

“There's been a common misconception that I just gave up my child, when that couldn't be farther from the truth,” she told Jay Shetty on his podcast, On Purpose With Jay Shetty. “I hope it's a little clearer.” While battling postpartum depression and addiction, Panettiere gave full custody of daughter Kaya to her father, Ukrainian boxer Wladimir Klitschko. But Paniettiere has always been a presence in Kaya's life. “I have an incredible relationship with her,” she said. “I travel [to see her] as much as I can. We have a really intense, incredible bond, and I'm very grateful for that.”
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 weeks ago

It screws with your mind': Jennie Garth on 90210 fame in her 20s and speeding up in her 50s

In March 2023, she noted in her diary that potential acting jobs were few and far between, if at all really. She rarely heard from her agent, and she didn't want to get in touch with him just to hear how different the business has become, how they just aren't looking for a woman my age, with my stereotyped abilities. As an actor, and one who had been particularly typecast, she was used to rejection, she wrote, but this is getting a little scary.
Writing
Writing
fromConsequence
2 weeks ago

Macaulay Culkin Opens Up About "Unfinished Business" with Catherine O'Hara

Catherine O'Hara’s death prompted Macaulay Culkin to feel they had unfinished business and that he owed her a favor.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 weeks ago

Hot divorcee summer: get ready for big hats, hot sex and don't-care energy

Divorcee energy is a high-glam, effort-forward aesthetic that rejects caring about others’ opinions and centers on a post-split glow-up.
Writing
fromMedium
2 weeks ago

Everything I know about AI, I learned from a genie

AI systems follow constraints, but they can still be steered toward harmful persuasion, so instructions must be precise and values-aligned.
Writing
fromwww.nytimes.com
2 weeks ago

Where Was Nurul Amin Shah Alam?

A disabled Rohingya refugee vanished after Border Patrol released him from jail without notifying anyone, and a dead body was later found.
Writing
fromSilicon Canals
2 weeks ago

Quote of the day by Helen Mirren: "When you're 16, 30 seems ancient. When you're 30, 45 seems ancient. When you're 45, 60 seems ancient. When you're 60, nothing seems ancient." - Silicon Canals

“Ancient” changes with perspective, and age-based deadlines create costly pressure by treating timing as fixed and universal.
#memoir
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago
Writing

What I Learned From Being Catfished

A book proposal process triggers self-doubt when sales data and a specific email praise expose inner struggle and personal approval needs.
fromwww.npr.org
3 weeks ago
Writing

Siri Hustvedt discusses her new book, 'Ghost Stories: A Memoir of Love & Grief'

A memoir portrays grief as a cognitive and bodily process, where memory, self-dialogue, and physical traces of a partner’s presence persist after death.
Writing
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

What I Learned From Being Catfished

A book proposal process triggers self-doubt when sales data and a specific email praise expose inner struggle and personal approval needs.
Writing
fromwww.npr.org
3 weeks ago

Siri Hustvedt discusses her new book, 'Ghost Stories: A Memoir of Love & Grief'

A memoir portrays grief as a cognitive and bodily process, where memory, self-dialogue, and physical traces of a partner’s presence persist after death.
Writing
fromTODAY.com
2 weeks ago

Students Secretly Collected Their Professor's Best Life Advice. The Quotes Have Gone Viral

Listening to yourself, others, nature, and the world turns writing instruction into life guidance through humor and hard-earned wisdom.
Writing
fromAnOther
2 weeks ago

This Intricate Novel Is Written from the Perspective of a Compulsive Liar

An unnamed narrator admits lying while blending love, work, and investigative research with critiques of facial-expression lie detection.
fromCN Traveller
2 weeks ago

I just got back from Tokyo - and there's a secret to why everyone's hair looks impeccable

On the train to Shibuya, the woman next to me reached into her bag to find her phone and knocked a palm-sized, red heart-shaped gadget onto the floor. She picked it up hastily, and I saw that it was a hairbrush. So, I did the unthinkable in a society where people generally don't speak to each other on the train, and asked when it was. She showed me with a few quick strokes through her lengths and fringe, and I watched as, instantly, her hair snapped back into place and smoothed out.
Writing
fromwww.aljazeera.com
2 weeks ago

Picking up the torch from Shireen Abu Akleh

Shireen's killing was meant to scare Palestinians into silence. Instead, it has inspired many young Palestinians to speak up. I can't remember a time in my childhood when I didn't hear Shireen Abu Akleh's voice. She was one of the few constants in our ever-shifting landscape, an icon that anchored the Palestinian cause firmly in the Arab conscience.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 weeks ago

Michael Pennington was an actor of astonishing range, a wise writer and witty company

He co-founded, with Michael Bogdanov, the English Shakespeare Company. He toured the world with one-man shows on Shakespeare and Chekhov. He directed here and abroad and wrote 10 books full of practical wisdom. On top of all that, he was witty and delightful company. His acting career falls into distinctive phases. He spent much of the 1960s and 70s with the Royal Shakespeare Company, where many performances stand out.
Writing
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 weeks ago

I knew my writing students were using AI. Their confessions led to a powerful teaching moment

Effective fiction workshops require close textual evidence for qualitative judgments, challenging writers to confront ego and communicate feelings through concrete prose.
Writing
fromThe New Yorker
2 weeks ago

How Reading with My Dying Mother Revealed Her Life

A mother’s nightly reading created closeness and imaginative escape, but later independence and separation from that routine changed their relationship.
Writing
fromSilicon Canals
2 weeks ago

I had everything a child could ask for - two loving parents, a stable home, encouragement at every turn - and it took me years to realize that kind of foundation created a blind spot - Silicon Canals

A stable, loving upbringing can create an unrecognized belief that the world will be glad you exist, masking how others experience risk and scarcity.
#solitary-confinement
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 weeks ago

Blindfolded, I sat down slowly. Then the interrogation began': Iranian Nobel laureate Narges Mohammadi on the torture of solitary confinement

Solitary confinement removes measurable time and movement, compressing days into an unending, light-only cycle that can drive a person to madness.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 weeks ago

Blindfolded, I sat down slowly. Then the interrogation began': Iranian Nobel laureate Narges Mohammadi on the torture of solitary confinement

Solitary confinement removes measurable time and movement, compressing days into an unending, light-only cycle that can drive a person to madness.
Writing
fromThe Nation
2 weeks ago

Teaching Poetry in the Age of AI

Lyric poetry depends on a real human presence, shaping how readers understand the writing “I” and connect across poetic tradition.
Writing
fromThe Atlantic
2 weeks ago

Understanding Our Mothers

Mothers are fully knowable only in fragments, and stories connect parental love, biology, and adult-child dynamics to the earlier lives behind them.
Writing
fromVulture
2 weeks ago

The Post-Trauma Plot Book Is Here

Trauma is framed as both a path to restorative justice and a reason to reject competitive suffering, while personal experience shapes a chaotic, provocative classroom ranking of harms.
Writing
fromEsquire
2 weeks ago

'Lord of the Flies' Has Been Misunderstood for Too Long

Cruelty among boys emerges from inherited culture and socialization, not from innate savagery, shaping violence through misunderstanding and reenacted norms.
Writing
fromwww.businessinsider.com
2 weeks ago

I passed out at 4 a.m. in my bathroom. 3 months later, I decided to walk 73 miles across Spain to conquer my anxiety.

A vasovagal syncope episode caused a nighttime fainting fall, resulting in a broken nose and ongoing concern about head injury.
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