Survival Doesn’t Always Mean Fighting – Sometimes It Means Feeling
A reflective exploration of survival as feeling, showing how endurance, awareness, and inner intelligence sustain people in harsh and challenging conditions.
A reflective exploration of survival as feeling, showing how endurance, awareness, and inner intelligence sustain people in harsh and challenging conditions.
A reflective exploration of shame as a social tool, examining how subtle humiliation shapes behavior, self-perception, and social control.
A reflective exploration of everyday life in a city that survives by pretending everything is normal, revealing the quiet strategies people use in a system that has never been repaired.
A reflective exploration of the songs we carry in silence, the inner melodies only the soul can hear, shaping memory, feeling, and resilience.
A deep reflection on the economy of favors, exploring how people survive, trade, and build trust without money, and how courage, skill, and relationships create value beyond capitalism.
A reflective exploration of addiction as a structure rather than weakness, showing how substances can create order and rhythm in chaotic lives.
A reflective exploration of migration, hope, guilt, and the right to remain or leave, showing that freedom and endurance take many forms beyond simple choices.
A reflective look at people and communities running on exhaustion, not brokenness—discover how survival stretches bodies, minds, and bonds, and why overuse feels like the only option.
A reflective look at the quiet impact of waiting for basic needs like electricity, water, and jobs, and how delayed support shapes daily survival and resilience.
There is a quiet shift that happens when survival becomes the central concern. Dreams fade slowly, almost unnoticed, until the future is not imagined but managed. Every decision is measured by what it takes to get through the next day: food, safety, money, shelter. Planning beyond this moment feels dangerous, unnecessary, or even foolish. The…