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...
Author: Raven Fon
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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...
Where you live in America can shape your access to education in ways that are easy to overlook until you look at the data. A new analysis published in early 2026 ranked all 50 states by the educational achievement of their residents, and the gaps between the top and the bottom are genuinely striking. The...
There’s a specific kind of exhaustion that comes from arguing with someone who never loses. They don’t win because they’re right. They win because they’re better at the game than you are – better at flipping the script, better at making you doubt yourself, better at walking away looking like the reasonable one while you’re...
Most people have a cleaning routine they’d describe, if pressed, as pretty solid. The floors get vacuumed. The bathroom gets scrubbed. The kitchen counters get wiped down after dinner. And yet, somewhere in the house right now, there are things accumulating bacteria at a pace that would make a microbiologist genuinely uncomfortable – and none...
There’s a particular kind of exhaustion that has nothing to do with sleep. It comes from the accumulation of everything: the cost of staying put, the daily grind that no longer feels worth the squeeze, the nagging sense that life could be arranged differently if only you had the space to arrange it. Millions of...
Most of us step out of bed in the morning and reach for a pair of shoes almost on autopilot. It’s just what you do. You shuffle to the kitchen in your slippers, maybe pull on sneakers to walk the dog, and by the time you sit down for breakfast your feet haven’t touched the...
There’s a version of this that almost every one of us has experienced: standing outside during a partial solar eclipse, squinting through cardboard glasses at a crescent-shaped sun, feeling the temperature dip by a degree or two, and thinking, that was it? A partial eclipse is a pleasant curiosity. What astronomers are predicting for August...
Mother’s Day is supposed to be easy. You grab some flowers, maybe a card with a sentimental poem about how she gave you life, toss in a brunch reservation, and call it done. But if your mom has spent the past several decades criticizing your hair, guilt-tripping you for not calling enough, and somehow managing...
Most of us have made the same optimistic mistake at some point. You bag up everything that’s been sitting in the garage or cluttering the spare room, tell yourself you’re doing something good for the community, and drive it all to the Goodwill donation center. Then the person at the drop-off window starts shaking their...
There’s a version of international travel that used to feel uncomplicated. You packed your bags, landed somewhere with an American passport, and the world generally received you with curiosity, warmth, or at least indifference. That dynamic has been shifting for a few years, but in 2025 it shifted hard. The data that’s come in since,...