-
Continue reading →: Finding Hope in the DarknessWe all carry an invisible weight. Some days it’s manageable—a dull ache hanging in the backdrop of our lives. Other days it feels crushing, like we’re drowning under a mass of our fears, regrets, and responsibilities. Tim O’Brien understood this better than most when he wrote The Things They Carried,…
-
Continue reading →: When the Sleep Won’t ComeHave you ever lain in bed, staring at the ceiling at 3 AM, wondering if you’ll ever sleep again? If so, you’re definitely not alone. Insomnia has quietly become a major issue in our society, and the numbers are pretty staggering. According to a 2018 study, between 2002 and 2012,…
-
Continue reading →: The Wake-Up Call I Didn’t Know I NeededHave you ever had one of those moments where something completely shifts your perspective? I recently came across Andrew Braaksma’s essay, Some Lessons From The Assembly Line, and it hit me like a ton of bricks. Here’s a college student who spent his summers working brutal 12-hour shifts in factories,…
-
Continue reading →: Why We’re Still Talking About The Yellow Wallpaper in 2025“The color is repellent, almost revolting; a smouldering unclean yellow…”— Charlotte Perkins Gilman, “The Yellow Wallpaper” When I first read The Yellow Wallpaper, I was struck by how claustrophobic it felt. A woman slowly unraveling in a nursery-turned-prison, haunted by a pattern on the wall…
-
Continue reading →: When Literature Becomes LiberationReading Power Through Marxist and Ethnic Studies Lenses Literature has always been a mirror reflecting the power structures that shape our world. When we examine classic and contemporary works through the focused lenses of Marxist and Ethnic Studies theories, we uncover not just stories, but entire systems of oppression and…
-
Continue reading →: Reclaiming the PageA Review of Elaine Showalter’s Feminist Classic, A Literature of Their Own There are books that teach you something new, and then there are books that help you remember what you’ve always felt but didn’t have the words for. Elaine Showalter’s A Literature of Their Own is that book. This…
-
Continue reading →: 5 Books I Believe Will Become The Future ClassicsLet me ask you something— What makes a book a classic? Have you ever thought about how a novel becomes a timeless piece living decades or centuries into the future? It’s not just its age or placement on the dusty book shelves of bookstores and libraries— it’s the power it…
-
Continue reading →: Learning to Breathe Again: Embracing Grief & Moving ForwardGrief is a wild, unpredictable beast. It doesn’t follow a schedule, it doesn’t care about your plans, and it doesn’t just fade away because enough time has passed. And you know what? That is okay. In a world that often pushes us to be okay, to move on, and to…
-
Continue reading →: Why I Ditched New Year’s Resolutions & Why You Should TooEvery January 1st, for the New Year, I’d sit down with a steaming cup of coffee, a new crisp notebook, and an unrealistic amount of optimism and motivation, and I’d create my list of New Year’s resolutions. The usuals are always there: “Stop procrastinating and become more organized,” “Write at…
-
Continue reading →: Navigating the Quarter-Life Crisis: Finding Purpose in Your 30sMany of us are familiar with the “midlife crisis,” a time of turmoil and uncertainty that middle-aged people seem to find themselves in, but did you know that there is a quarter-life crisis that impacts many late-20—to early-30-year-olds? This article explores this phenomenon and offers guidance on finding purpose during…
Support My Work!
Make a monthly donation
Make a yearly donation
Choose an amount
Or enter a custom amount
Thank you for your love and support!
Your contribution is appreciated.
Your contribution is appreciated.
DonateDonate monthlyDonate yearly


