Monsters in Literature: Exploring the Uncanny and Beyond
monsters are our secret weapons, our way to prod the edges of the known. but they’re also our downfall. we […]
monsters are our secret weapons, our way to prod the edges of the known. but they’re also our downfall. we […]
what if your life’s every twist—every win, every loss—was just a ticket in a grand lottery? explore how chance and
the world isn’t flat—it’s uneven, semi-globalized. differences in culture, laws, geography, and economy aren’t hurdles; they’re strategic levers. winning globally
imagine living next to a superpower that sees your sovereignty as optional. canada’s struggle isn’t just economic—it’s existential. when over
hobbesian anxiety isn’t about monsters under the bed—it’s about the creeping dread that the systems we rely on are unknowable
fear isn’t just a feeling—it’s a full-body symphony led by the amygdala. from the thalamus’s quick alerts to the cortex’s
autocrats don’t just fall—they unravel. they co-opt, repress, and adapt, but paranoia is their constant companion. when loyalty cracks or
in a culture obsessed with hustle, where productivity apps ping relentlessly and social media scrolls beckon like sirens, haemin sunim’s
imagine choosing a marriage without sex—not for lack of desire, but as a radical act of faith. in medieval times,
ever feel like you’re passionately defending a moral stance, fully aware it’s shaped by your unique experiences and culture? that’s