Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Humans.
Valentine's Encounter: A Cross-Cultural Love Story Part 2
Blossoms of Connection The morning sun of Paris filtered gently through the windows of Sakura’s small hotel room, casting soft patterns on her neatly organized sketchbooks. She could hardly sleep the night before, her mind replaying every moment with Luca at the Eiffel Tower. The memory of their hands brushing, their laughter mingling with the wind, and the warmth in his eyes had lingered like a melody she couldn’t forget.
By Ahmed aldeabellaabout 6 hours ago in Humans
Valentine's Encounter: A Cross-Cultural Love Story Part 1
A Serendipitous Valentine The crisp February air of Paris carried a certain magic that day. The city was alive with the whispers of romance, as if the cobblestone streets themselves conspired to bring hearts together. Amidst the fluttering banners and blooming roses at the Eiffel Tower, Luca Romano, an Italian art student visiting Paris for the first time, walked with a blend of excitement and curiosity. His sketchbook was tucked under his arm, his eyes darting around, capturing fleeting moments of beauty in the city of love.
By Ahmed aldeabellaabout 6 hours ago in Humans
30 Signs Your Girlfriend Is Cheating on You: 'Shocking Studies'. Content Warning.
You are not going anywhere because something is not right, and that queasy stomach feeling is not letting go. Perhaps she has been distant recently, or her cell phone has become a safe deposit box, or she is just simply different.
By Tarek Rakhiessabout 7 hours ago in Humans
Hearts Beyond Borders
In the heart of Mumbai, India, Meera Kapoor navigated the chaotic streets every morning on her scooter. The city was alive with color, noise, and motion — a symphony that thrilled and exhausted her in equal measure. She was a journalist, passionate about uncovering human stories, and she loved how Mumbai forced her to keep moving, to keep observing, to never settle.
By Ahmed aldeabellaabout 7 hours ago in Humans
Across Two Worlds, We Chose Love
On the eastern edge of Istanbul, where the call to prayer echoed softly between ancient buildings and the Bosphorus shimmered like a living memory, Lina Demir began her mornings with quiet reflection. She worked as an architect, passionate about restoring old structures without erasing their soul. Istanbul had shaped her — a city balanced between continents, traditions, and contradictions. She believed deeply in family, in shared meals, in history passed through stories rather than books.
By Ahmed aldeabellaabout 7 hours ago in Humans
A Love That Crossed Cities and Cultures
In the early mornings of Barcelona, when the streets still smelled of yesterday’s rain and fresh bread drifted from corner bakeries, Sofia Alvarez liked to sit by her small apartment window with a cup of strong coffee. From the fourth floor, she could see the narrow street below slowly waking up: shopkeepers lifting metal shutters, cyclists weaving through the quiet, and elderly neighbors greeting each other as if time itself had slowed for them. Sofia loved her city deeply. Barcelona was not just a place she lived; it was a rhythm, a language, a memory stitched into her bones.
By Ahmed aldeabellaabout 7 hours ago in Humans
Why Work From Home Didn't Fix Burnout
For a while, work-from-home was treated like a cure. No commute. More flexibility. Control over your environment. People thought that if they could just work from home, the exhaustion would finally lift. That the constant strain would ease once they were out of the office, out of traffic, out of fluorescent lights and forced small talk.
By Danielle Katsourosabout 9 hours ago in Humans
Are We Letting AI Think for Us — or Teaching It to Think Like Us?
Not long ago, thinking was considered the last truly human frontier. Machines could calculate faster than us, store more information than us, and repeat tasks endlessly—but thinking? That was ours. Messy, emotional, biased, creative, flawed. Human.
By Mind Meets Machineabout 9 hours ago in Humans
‘Red Line’: Global NGOs Working in Gaza Defy Israel’s Threats After MSF Ban. AI-Generated.
International non-governmental organizations (NGOs) operating in Gaza have signaled their intent to continue humanitarian work despite rising tensions and reported threats following a ban involving Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF). The situation has sparked global debate over humanitarian access, the safety of aid workers, and the responsibilities of governments during conflict situations.
By Aarif Lashariabout 10 hours ago in Humans










