Lifestyle
For the lives that we love, and everything that comes with it.
Get Rid of Dark Pimple Marks
Dark pimple marks, often called post-acne marks, are one of the most common skin concerns today. Even after acne heals, these marks can remain on the skin for weeks or even months, making the complexion appear uneven. Many people struggle with these stubborn spots, especially those with oily or sensitive skin.
By Stories Todayabout 2 hours ago in Viva
The Man Who Fell From 33,000 Feet and Lived:
How a Serbian flight attendant survived the highest fall without a parachute and the mysterious explosion that caused it The survival of Vesna Vulović, a twenty-two-year-old flight attendant who fell 33,330 feet from an exploding aircraft over Czechoslovakia in 1972 and lived, represents the most extreme survivable fall in recorded history, and the circumstances of both the explosion that destroyed JAT Yugoslav Airlines Flight 367 and her impossible survival have never been fully explained, making her story one of the most remarkable and mysterious in aviation history. On January 26, 1972, Vulović was working aboard DC-9 Flight 367 traveling from Stockholm to Belgrade with stops in Copenhagen and Zagreb, and she was actually a last-minute crew substitution, replacing another flight attendant named Vesna who had the same first name, and this twist of fate meant that she was on a plane she was never supposed to be on, working a route that was not her usual assignment, when at 4:01 PM the aircraft was at cruising altitude over the mountains of eastern Czechoslovakia and suddenly exploded, breaking apart in mid-air and sending debris and passengers falling six miles to the ground below.
By The Curious Writerabout 9 hours ago in Men
Alive
The shocking true story of Uruguayan Air Force Flight 571 and the moral horror that saved sixteen lives The crash of Uruguayan Air Force Flight 571 into the Andes Mountains on October 13, 1972, and the subsequent seventy-two-day survival ordeal of the passengers would become one of the most controversial and morally complex survival stories ever recorded, forcing sixteen young men to make the unthinkable decision to consume the flesh of their dead friends and teammates in order to stay alive in one of the most hostile environments on Earth, and the psychological and ethical dimensions of their choice continue to provoke debate and reflection more than fifty years after their rescue shocked the world. The flight was carrying forty-five people including nineteen members of the Old Christians Club rugby team from Montevideo, Uruguay, along with their friends and family members, traveling to Chile for a tournament, and the passengers were young, healthy, optimistic people with their whole lives ahead of them, many of them students from wealthy families who had never experienced real hardship and who could not have imagined that their routine flight would turn into a nightmare of freezing temperatures, starvation, and impossible moral choices that would haunt them forever.
By The Curious Writerabout 9 hours ago in Pride
127 Hours of Hell
Aron Ralston's unthinkable choice in a Utah canyon and the excruciating self-amputation that saved his life The human survival instinct is powerful enough to make us do things we would consider absolutely impossible under normal circumstances, and nowhere is this more dramatically illustrated than in the true story of Aron Ralston, a twenty-seven-year-old mechanical engineer and experienced outdoorsman who became trapped alone in a remote Utah canyon in April 2003 and made the unthinkable decision to amputate his own right arm using a cheap multi-tool knife in order to free himself from the eight-hundred-pound boulder that had him pinned against a canyon wall, and the fact that he survived this self-performed surgery and managed to rappel down a sixty-five-foot cliff and hike seven miles through the desert before finding help represents one of the most remarkable survival stories in modern history. Ralston's ordeal began on Saturday, April 26, 2003, when he drove alone to Canyonlands National Park in southeastern Utah for a day of solo canyoneering, a sport he was passionate about that involves hiking, climbing, and rappelling through slot canyons, and he deliberately chose not to tell anyone where he was going because he valued his independence and solitude and never imagined that this decision would nearly cost him his life and would become the detail that made his situation so desperately dangerous.
By The Curious Writerabout 9 hours ago in Men
What Does the Angel Number 777 Mean I Found Out the Hard Way
I kept seeing 777 everywhere during the worst phase of my marriage. It started small a license plate, a receipt total, the time on my phone when I'd wake up at night and stare at the ceiling wondering if we were going to make it. I wasn't looking for signs back then. I was just trying to survive the silence between us, the way we'd stopped touching each other, the way conversations had become transactions about groceries and schedules instead of anything that mattered.
By Brooks Ghost Max a day ago in Families
A Parent Who Didn’t Know They Could Apply for a Child Arrangements Order
I remember standing outside the school gates one Tuesday afternoon, watching the other parents collect their kids, and thinking: this might be the last time I do this. Not because I wanted it to be. Because I'd been told, in so many words, that it wasn't really up to me anymore.
By Family Law Service2 days ago in Families
The Timeless Sparkle: Why the Tennis Bracelet is 2026’s Most Essential Accessory
In the fast-paced world of fashion, trends come and go with the seasons. We’ve seen the rise and fall of chunky "statement" necklaces, the obsession with neon accessories, and the fleeting era of oversized logos. But amidst this noise, one piece of jewellery has remained a constant, shimmering symbol of sophistication: the diamond tennis bracelets.
By Mohd Kaish2 days ago in Viva















