Once In A Blue Moon

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Nowhere Is My Home - There’s a strange comfort in not belonging. For some, the idea of home conjures images of a fixed address, childhood memories, familiar streets, or a single place on the map that holds it all together. But for others—wanderers, seekers, the in-between souls—home isn’t something they return to. It’s something they carry, lose, rebuild, or redefine with each passing chapter. For them, nowhere is home. This isn’t a story of being lost. It’s a story of becoming. To not have a home in the traditional sense is often seen as rootless, even tragic. But what if it’s just different? What if not being tied to a single place frees you from the illusion that a single place is where meaning lives? Maybe it’s not a specific town, house, or skyline that defines home. Maybe it’s the moments in motion—the stretch of highway at dawn, the silence of a new city at night, the familiar hum of solitude. Some people don’t leave home. Others spend their lives searching for it. But there's another kind entirely: those who stop looking. Not out of hopelessness, but because they’ve realized something quieter, more subtle—home isn't a destination for everyone. For some, it’s the feeling of freedom in uncertainty. The sense of presence in the unknown. The ability to let go, again and again, and still feel whole. "Nowhere is my home" isn’t a cry for sympathy. It’s a statement of independence. Of resilience. It’s an admission that sometimes the only place you truly fit is the space between places, the breath between conversations, the stillness between lives. It’s not about having no place. It’s about belonging to all of them, even if just for a little while. In a world that pushes permanence—roots, houses, titles—there’s something beautifully radical about living untethered. About finding comfort in the temporary. About building connection not through location, but through experience. It’s about knowing that even without a fixed point on the map, you still exist fully, fiercely, and with intention. So when someone says, “Where are you from?” and your answer hesitates, bends, or doesn’t come at all—it’s okay. When you pack your bags more than you unpack them, it’s okay. When the only constant is change, and the only place that feels right is the space you’re standing in right now—it’s more than okay. It might just be home.
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🐧 Happy World Penguin Day! ❄️

April 28, 2025

Article of the Day

“Hell Is Other People” – A Profound Exploration of Existentialism

Introduction The phrase “Hell is other people” has become an iconic representation of existentialist thought, famously coined by French philosopher…
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It’s a scene we’ve all been a part of: The room is perfectly quiet, the environment is conducive, and your to-do list is well defined. You are about to delve deep into productivity, the gears in your mind are all oiled up and ready to roll. But wait, a seemingly innocent thought pops up, “Let me just check social media real quick before I start.” Beware, for this thought is a perilous trap, a silent productivity assassin. It aims to bankrupt your mental currency, leaving your cognitive reserves depleted and your focus impoverished.

The concept of mental currency is pivotal in understanding how our brains operate. Just as with money, our mental resources are finite. Every action, every thought, every distraction costs us a bit of that precious mental currency. As we mindlessly scroll through social media, we unconsciously spend this limited currency on cheap, temporary thrills that do little for our long-term satisfaction or productivity.

As we plunge into the endless scrolling abyss, each like, comment, or share, seems inconsequential. However, these seemingly trivial interactions are transactions where you are spending your mental currency, often leaving you bankrupt of focus and creativity when it’s time to work. These platforms are designed to be addictive, each notification luring you back, encouraging you to make just one more mental expenditure, ensuring that your mind is constantly interrupted and unable to sustain focus.

You may argue, “It’s just a quick check, a brief distraction.” But understand this, distractions are costly. Bringing back focus after each interruption is an expensive affair. It’s not merely the time spent on the distraction; it’s also the cost of the mental effort required to regain focus and the momentum lost due to the break in concentration.

So, before you give in to the urge of ‘quickly’ checking social media, remember, your phone within easy reach is a constant temptation, a relentless push towards spending your mental currency on fruitless activities. If you find yourself complaining about a lack of focus or a feeling of constant exhaustion, examine your spending habits. Are you investing your mental currency in actions and thoughts that yield rich returns, or are you squandering it on the fleeting, empty thrill of mindless scrolling?

Preserve your mental currency, safeguard your focus, and be mindful of where you spend your cognitive resources. Don’t allow distractions to make you bankrupt of the mental wealth required for meaningful productivity and profound creativity. Remember, the choice of investment is yours; choose wisely.


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