science
The Science Behind Relationships; Humans Media explores the basis of our attraction, contempt, why we do what we do and to whom we do it.
The "Dirty Dozen" 2026: Why Your Healthy Diet Might Be Secretly Aging You
It is March 2026, and the self-care world is obsessed with a single number: your cellular age. If you have been trading the processed burgers for vibrant salads, buying organic spinach, and snacking on fresh strawberries, you likely feel like a health saint. But according to a major, peer-reviewed study released just this month by the Environmental Working Group (EWG), that "healthy" diet might be loading your system with more dangerous chemical residues than you realize—and it’s accelerating your internal clock.
By Mohammad Hamid8 days ago in Humans
The Therian Movement
In recent years, online spaces like TikTok, YouTube, and Reddit have helped bring attention to a niche but growing subculture known as the *therian movement*. While the idea may seem unusual at first glance, the movement reflects broader cultural trends around identity exploration, online communities, and how young people interpret their place in the world. Understanding what is behind the therian movement—and how it may influence younger generations—requires looking beyond the surface to the psychological, social, and digital factors that sustain it.
By AnthonyBTV8 days ago in Humans
Are We Closer Than We Think?
Lately, I have been thinking about something that feels uncomfortable to admit. Are we, as human beings, closer to psychological instability than we would like to believe? Not in a clinical sense. Not in the dramatic way people imagine madness. I mean in the quiet psychological sense. The sense where one more small trigger feels like it could push someone over the edge.
By Eunice Kamau11 days ago in Humans
You Ate What?
What did you say? You ate what? We have been consumed with modern technology. Every week it seems there is some new innovation to consider. Never has it been more imperative to take a step back and revisit what we are dealing with, because everything has a consequence, good or bad.
By Alexandra Grant14 days ago in Humans
The Immune System’s "Civil War": When the body forgets its own identity and begins to dismantle the nervous system.
The smell of scorched copper and old, damp wool hit me first, rising from the patient's bedside like a foul incense. It was 3:14 AM. The woman in the cot didn't move her legs. She couldn't. She looked at them with a visceral detachment, as if they were two heavy logs left behind by a stranger. Her own T-cells, the very soldiers meant to protect her from the rot of the world, were currently stripping the insulation from her nerves. It was a microscopic demolition. It was a silent, internal arson. I watched her hand tremble as she reached for a glass of water—a jagged, stuttering motion that spoke of a command signal lost in a fraying wire.
By The Chaos Cabinet14 days ago in Humans
Falling Between Every System
Modern social systems are often described as safety nets. Employment law protects workers. Healthcare programs provide treatment. Disability benefits replace lost income. Unemployment insurance bridges job loss. Each system is presented as a safeguard designed to catch people when life disrupts their ability to function normally. Yet for many people living with disability, chronic illness, or injury, the lived experience is the opposite. Rather than forming a net, these systems stack vertically, each with its own eligibility rules, thresholds, and assumptions. Instead of catching the fall, they create gaps. People do not slip through because they failed to try. They fall because the systems were never designed to align.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast14 days ago in Humans








