You can see a lot of America without ever truly seeing it. Fly into a famous city, hit the landmark you’ve heard about since childhood, take the photo, fly home. Repeat across a dozen states and you’ve technically “been everywhere” while missing almost everything that makes each place worth the trip. The most famous attractions...
Author: Raven Fon
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A new national poll landed this week with findings striking enough that the organization that commissioned it did something unusual: it went back to the pollsters and asked them to recheck the numbers. They did. The numbers held. What those numbers show is a portrait of an American public in which a majority of respondents,...
Most people assume a difficult childhood is obvious to everyone around them. The kid being shuttled between relatives after a divorce, the one who flinched when adults raised their voices, the one who wore the same shoes for two school years running. But difficulty doesn’t always announce itself. It can be quiet, domestic, invisible from...
Imagine rewatching a movie from the 90s where you start it half-asleep on a Tuesday night, absolutely certain you’ve seen it a dozen times and know exactly what you’re getting. And then something catches you off guard. A line that lands differently. A performance you missed entirely the first time. A scene that turns out...
Something shifted quietly over the last few years in the way people think about where they live. What used to feel like a fantasy – actually leaving, actually going – has turned into a conversation millions of people are having in earnest. The search terms, the visa consultations, the Facebook groups full of strangers asking...
The cameras caught the handshakes, the honor guard, the children waving flags. The official photographs showed two presidents in agreement, toasting at a state dinner in the Great Hall of the People, smiling at the Temple of Heaven against a backdrop of ancient stone. From the outside, the U.S. and China appeared to forge more...
There’s a particular kind of confidence gap that nobody really talks about. The one between how secure you actually feel and how secure you appear to others. Most people assume those two things are roughly in sync. They’re not. You can feel perfectly fine about yourself and still be broadcasting uncertainty to every room you...
Intelligence often shows up in unexpected ways, and many of the things smart women say reveal how they think with clarity and intention. Instead of relying on complicated language or loud opinions, they use straightforward phrases that reflect emotional awareness, strong reasoning, and the ability to understand people and situations with ease. These moments are...
The middle-class conversation is an important one. Many households know they are neither wealthy nor poor, yet they often wonder why they do not have more to show for their earnings. The state you live in plays a crucial role in this experience. A recent analysis looked at how middle-class income has shifted across states...
Most people, when they hear the word “narcissist,” picture a single recognizable villain. The charming but hollow partner. The boss who takes credit for everything. The friend who somehow turns every conversation back to themselves. What gets talked about less is the version that lives inside a family home, behind closed doors, in the years...
Most people have a thought and let it go. You have a thought and then spend the next forty minutes following it down every logical corridor it opens up, checking for inconsistencies, connecting it to something you read three years ago, and wondering what it says about the nature of things. And you probably don’t...
A tough question often arises at the worst moments. After losing someone you love or while quietly planning ahead to ease your family’s burden, you wonder: what does my faith say about cremation? Is it acceptable? Does it really matter? Will it impact what comes next? For many American Christians, this is not just a...