YOU HAVE TO FORGET HIM
Some breakups hit you hard. And there are nights when alcohol doesn’t numb the pain—it turns up the volume: the sadness, the anger, the urge to cry your eyes out...
And when the drama spills over, that’s when the best friend steps in. Not the one who gives advice, not the one who talks sense. The one who just does what she can with what she’s got. And what she’s got is fingers, determination, and absolutely no shame.
Because if tears won’t help you forget your ex, maybe moans will.
And the guy filming from the balcony? Just like all of us—speechless.
This is the kind of scene you only catch at 4 a.m., when the night’s gone off the rails, the heels are gone, and any spot will do for a couch, a therapy session, or an improvised bed.
Remember that finger challenge?
THE PATH TO SUCCESS IN A STARTUPEveryone dreams of having a successful startup, but what’s often left unsaid is that before you see any results, you’ve got to put in a lot of hours. It’s not magic or about having a brilliant idea one day and swimming in success the next. For a startup to thrive, the first step is hard work, dedication, and consistency.
The early stages of a startup are the toughest: you’ll face long days (and nights), make tough decisions, deal with uncertainty, and often encounter failure. But if you don’t dedicate the time and effort from the start, the results you’re aiming for will never come.
There are no shortcuts or secret formulas—just hard work. So, if you’re thinking of launching your own startup, remember that success doesn’t come overnight. First, there are the hours of effort, weeks of planning, and months of execution. Then, with luck and persistence, you’ll start seeing the fruits of your labor.
The trick? Don’t give up. Work harder than ever in the beginning, pour your time and energy into it, and eventually, the results will come. But without those initial hours of pure dedication, the only thing guaranteed is that you won’t achieve anything.
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The slo-mo of the day.
THE HITCHHIKING CULTUREperritopiloto
There was a time when hitting the road with a backpack and your thumb out wasn’t just a way to travel — it was a whole mindset. It wasn’t about getting there fast or riding in comfort. It was about trust. Trust in people, in luck, in the road itself.
The hitchhiker — that character somewhere between adventurer, street philosopher, and laid-back backpacker — had its golden era from the '60s to the '90s. You’d spot them at gas stations, highway exits, or standing by the side of a country road, cardboard sign in hand, smile on their face. And just like that, through stories, shared smokes, and cassette tapes, little human connections were born — ones that lasted as long as the ride did.
But like many beautiful things, hitchhiking started to fade. Fear crept in, the news got darker, smartphones took over, and then came ridesharing apps and cheap flights. These days, pulling over for a stranger feels more like a movie scene than a real plan.
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Just another random day, on a random metro line, in a random train car.
MARRIAGE IS NOT A PATRIARCHAL INVENTION TO OPPRESS WOMEN; QUITE THE OPPOSITElucilboy
From an evolutionary perspective, marriage can be seen as a feminine strategy to ensure stability and male commitment. While male biology tends to favor the wide dispersion of genes, women, who invest significantly more in raising children, needed to secure emotional and material support from their partners. Monogamous marriage emerged as a way to limit male promiscuity and ensure that their resources were directed exclusively to their family.
The legitimization of children, the concept of a stable home, and the transfer of resources within marriage addressed practical and social needs that primarily benefited women. Additionally, religious and moral norms reinforced male fidelity and commitment, turning marriage into an institution that balanced power between genders and ensured the survival and well-being of families.
In this context, marriage became a tool to hold men accountable, curbing their impulse to spread their offspring indiscriminately while providing a safe environment for raising children, meeting both female and family needs.
At the same time, marriage offered men a false sense of security, making them believe that the children they were investing their efforts and resources in were their own, further reinforcing exclusivity within the family unit.
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The slap I’m about to give you will take your makeup off in the blink of an eye.