Share. Engage. Grow. Earn.

Share your story, show your creativity, and connect with a growing community. Engage, contribute and earn real money.

Read and share stories

Share your stories where it’s seen. Read, engage, and grow naturally.

Grow your ideas and business

Post what you need — the community is here to support and get things done.

Earn real money

Get paid for your creativity, tasks, and contributions to the community.

What's up in community

Discover stories from the community

Sara Martinez
· Jul 24

Things I Learned After My Heart Got Broken

You never really expect heartbreak. You can sense trouble. You can feel shifts. But the actual moment it breaks — it hits you like a wave you didn’t see coming. And that’s what happened to me. Before I talk about what I learned, let me tell you how it all fell apart. The Breakup: How...
Sophia Lopez
· Jul 24

What No One Told Me About Being Alone and Healing

There are moments in life when everything slows down. Not because you want it to, but because it has to. Maybe a relationship ends. Maybe friendships drift. Maybe life forces you into a season of stillness. Suddenly, it is just you. You and the silence. You and your thoughts. You and the ache that no...
Daniel Brown
· Jul 24

JAMB Broke My Heart

My Mother Says I Was Born for Books There was never a question of what I would be when I grew up. “Doctor Ayomide Alade. Surgeon. Maybe even neurosurgeon. You know I was slicing up turkey at age six, abi?” I used to joke. But the real reason everyone thought I was built for greatness?...
Advertisement
Sara Martinez
· Jul 24

What Nollywood Taught Me About Family Drama (And It’s Deep)

Let’s be honest: We’ve all laughed, cried, or shouted “Egbami!” while watching a Nollywood family drama. From unexpected betrayals to mother-in-law wars, inheritance battles, and deeply rooted secrets… Nollywood doesn’t just entertain. It exposes. It educates. And sometimes, it mirrors our realities a little too closely. But beyond the shouting matches, village scenes, and dramatic...
Advertisement
Linda Okore
· Jul 24

What No One Tells You About Becoming “That Girl”

You’ve seen her. She wakes up at 5:00 AM, drinks green smoothies, journals with perfect handwriting, and somehow manages to look effortlessly radiant — every single day. She is “That Girl.” The internet’s version of the ideal woman: productive, balanced, self-aware, clean, focused, and aesthetic. And like many of us, I wanted to become her....
Linda Okore
· Jul 23

My Father’s Secret Wife

Ibadan in December is both dust and joy. The red earth rises as children chase one another barefoot through the compound. Aunties arrive in loud wrappers and louder laughter. Firewood crackles under big pots of jollof rice. Everything smells like home and memory. I hadn’t been back since July, and the house already felt…different. Mama...
Joe
· Jul 23

Love in Borrowed Time

Lisbon hummed with life outside the rain-splattered window. The bookstore was warm, cluttered, and smelled of old pages and espresso. Elise reached for a worn copy of The Little Prince — and so did someone else. Their fingers brushed. Her heart skipped. “Oh—sorry,” he said, smiling like he’d just stolen a star. “You first.” “You...
Katie Jackson
· Jul 23

When the House Went Quiet

The last thing Harper Young expected on a Monday evening was silence. She stood in her foyer, still in her scrubs, grocery bags digging into her forearms. The door shut behind her with a soft click. No bark from Jasper. No thudding footsteps from Jake upstairs. No hum from the dishwasher she’d left running. The...
Advertisement
Tom Martin
· Jul 22

The Girl from the Yellow Umbrella

The Girl from the Yellow Umbrella The first time Tunde saw her, she was dancing alone in the rain with a yellow umbrella. He was on his way home from work, stuck under the leaky tin roof of a roadside kiosk, watching Lagos traffic crawl like a lazy snake. Rain fell like it was personal....
Joe
· Jul 21

The Last Message

It was 7:43 a.m. when Amira’s phone buzzed three times. She rolled over, groggy and disoriented. Her eyes blinked at the screen: 3 new voice messages from a number she didn’t recognize. Unknown numbers usually meant spam or work. She played the first one without much thought. “If someone finds this… I’m sorry. I thought...
Katie Jackson
· Jul 20

What the World Can Learn From African Spirituality

African spirituality offers a fresh way to think about life, nature, and connection. You can learn how everything in the world is linked, and how respect for ancestors and nature can bring balance to your life. This ancient wisdom still guides many people today and can inspire you to live with more meaning and harmony....
Mark Jackson
· Jul 20

Why African Aunties Are the Funniest People on Earth

African aunties are often the funniest people because they have a unique way of mixing humor with truth. Their quick wit and bold honesty make their jokes hit home, often leaving everyone laughing while thinking. They don’t need a stage or a script; their humor comes naturally from everyday moments and family gatherings. Their ability...
Advertisement

Ready to Start Your Journey?

Join our creative community and start earning from your stories, skills, and creativity.

\n