Inspiration
Point The Blame At Your Heart
I write some poems, but not as many as others on Vocal. Most of my poems are about love—wanting love, sad love, or feelings of love. I think I am a big softie inside! Here we go. We blame love stuff on our hearts. We say “loving you with all my heart” and “you break my heart.” All love and feelings are linked to our hearts. We blame everything good or bad on hearts.
By Rosalina Jane25 days ago in Writers
How Elite Content Writers Are Building Personal Brands in 2026
In 2026, elite content writers are no longer invisible contributors working behind brand names. They are brands. The shift didn’t happen overnight, and it wasn’t driven by ego or vanity. It was driven by survival, leverage, and the realization that words alone are no longer enough. In an era where AI can generate articles in seconds, what truly separates elite writers is not speed or volume, but identity, credibility, and influence.
By Sathish Kumar 26 days ago in Writers
How to Write Werewolves Better
There is a lot of werewolf lore, and a lot of it contradicts itself. Some werewolves change with the moon, while others change whenever they want. Some werewolves require objects like a wolfskin belt to effect the change, while others do fine on their own. There are even debates on their relative intelligence once they’ve changed, and the debates on which specific forms they have can get…interesting. However, with a little forethought, writing werewolves can be a lot simpler.
By Jamais Jochim27 days ago in Writers
Content Writers Are Becoming Digital Architects in 2026
In 2026, content writing is no longer about filling pages with words or chasing algorithms blindly. The role has evolved into something far more powerful and demanding. Today’s content writers are becoming digital architects professionals who design experiences, shape perception, and build trust brick by brick across the internet.
By Sathish Kumar 28 days ago in Writers
The Forgotten Hero 💔
On January 6, 2014, in a small town of Pakistan, history was written not by a soldier, not by a leader, but by a 15-year-old schoolboy named Aitzaz Hasan. He was an ordinary student with ordinary dreams, carrying his school bag and walking toward his school like thousands of other children do every day. But that day, Aitzaz did something extraordinary. He chose courage over fear, sacrifice over safety, and humanity over his own life.
By Salman Writes29 days ago in Writers





