Taboo
A Tale of Unfulfilled Promises and Endless Waiting
In a certain year, he was nineteen years old and spending his only southern vacation at his aunt's house. She was the girl next door. Her stepmother was unkind to her. When he first saw her, she was wearing a dirty white cotton dress, with red and swollen finger marks on her face. Tears filled her eyes, yet her expression was cold. He squatted in front of her and asked, "Do you like puppies?" He showed her a white puppy he had picked up in a bamboo basket.
By Emotional Scribeabout a year ago in Confessions
The Seductive Neighbour. Content Warning.
I’ll never forget those softly spoken words. The way that she made eye contact while getting out of my car and softly uttered those words immediately got my mind racing with possibilities. It seemed to me as if they were thrown out almost as an afterthought, yet I couldn’t help wondering if there was an unspoken invitation there. The impact of them resonated with me for months.
By Chahat Kaur2 years ago in Confessions
Secrets. Content Warning.
Have you ever looked back and thought about lies you told and secrets you kept in the past, and wondered why you told them or kept them – especially the ones that should have never been kept? She did. Everyday. Out of all of her past secrets and lies, there is one time in her life that stands out above the rest. One period where all she kept were secrets, and all she spoke were lies.
By Luna Verity2 years ago in Confessions
Ten Valuable Life Lessons Who Lead To A Balanced and Successful Life:
1. Embrace Failure as a Learning Opportunity Failure is not a dead end; it's a stepping stone. One of the most valuable lessons you can learn is that mistakes and setbacks are integral parts of growth. Failure teaches resilience, patience, and problem-solving skills. When you fail, you learn more about what doesn’t work, which helps you refine your approach for future success. Many of the most successful people—whether entrepreneurs, artists, or innovators—often attribute their greatest achievements to lessons learned from their failures. The key is to see failure as feedback, not defeat.
By Alex Williams2 years ago in Confessions
Secret Confession #6. Content Warning.
But during college, I shared an apartment with a girl named Mia. We were taking the same course, and thus we had late-night study sessions plus similar experiences. Mia was one of those natural simpletons. She had a boyfriend, and from what I could gather, really seemed to be content about every angle of her life. She was academically very brilliant, always topping her class, and often she discussed freely with her classmates her affair with her boyfriend and even gave some intimate details of their life together.
By Chahat Kaur2 years ago in Confessions
Secret Confession #4. Content Warning.
It was two firsts for me. First of all, it was the first time I cheated on my husband. It was also the first time I hired a male escort. There are many factors involved as to why I did it. I was married for 17 years with two kids and was fine until my husband lost his job and I ended up going back to work. He looked for work for several weeks, then gave up. He did just fine keeping the house up until he started playing games. He had no interest in anything outside of that anymore.
By Chahat Kaur2 years ago in Confessions
Ai Bullshit
Last night I was so pissed because I was commenting on a Youtube tarot card reader's reading and saying it was bullshit he was using Ai for everything and talking about it possibly having consciousness and going forward with it in a "spiritual sense".
By Kayla McIntosh2 years ago in Confessions
Secret Confession. Content Warning.
This incident occurred in the last days of my engineering. I was a computer science student. I used to know one girl during my college days. For the sake of narration let's call her 'Snehal' (not her real name). Honestly, we were more than good friends. We had known each other for almost 4 years. We had kissed each other a couple of times but that was it. We never got to reach second base. But we were perfectly all right with that. Our friends knew about us. So did our professors but they did not bother us because our grades were top-notch. In short, we were the no-nonsense type of students.
By Chahat Kaur2 years ago in Confessions
Ammanda Part 2. Content Warning.
After that summer, my bond with Ammanda grew in ways I never could have imagined. It started as something casual—long conversations by the pool, moments of quiet laughter, and stolen glances when no one was looking. Despite her serious nature, Ammanda had a warm side she rarely showed, and I felt lucky to witness it. Months went by, and while she remained guarded about her private life, I began to sense there was something deeper beneath the surface. One evening, as we sat under the stars after a long day, she opened up to me about her past—about a marriage she was in that had lost its spark, but one she couldn’t easily walk away from. It wasn’t that she didn’t love her husband, but their relationship had become more about duty than passion.
By Niski2 years ago in Confessions



