literature
Best corporate culture and workplace literature to better your workplace experience. Journal's favorite stories.
Luck
The ways of fate are strange and unpredictable. What a person plans rarely turns out as expected. Aunt had searched far and wide for a suitable bride for Heer. She examined many girls, visiting every neighborhood and household. Her feet ached, her back stiffened, yet none matched her standards. Some were too short, others too tall; some were chubby, others frail; some had dull complexions, others pale like turnips. Every girl in the vicinity, every cousin and niece, was considered, but none suited her grandson Nabeel.
By Sudais Zakwanabout a month ago in Journal
Dream Journal - Entry 2
Dream Journaling: Unlock the Hidden World Within Every night, you journey to a realm where the impossible becomes real, where you fly without wings, converse with strangers who feel like old friends, and experience emotions more vivid than waking life itself. Yet by morning, these extraordinary adventures fade like mist in sunlight, leaving only fragments—or nothing at all.
By Parsley Rose about a month ago in Journal
Why Calm Is Becoming a Strategic Advantage in Hospitality
For decades, the professional kitchen has been defined by noise. Commands, shouts, orders fired across the line, arguments over timing, and tension disguised as discipline. The culinary world inherited a military structure in which volume equaled authority and pressure equaled performance. For a long time, that model seemed unquestionable.
By Cristian Marino2 months ago in Journal
Design Thinking for Writers
I stared at the blank page for what felt like the hundredth time that morning. My coffee had gone cold, my laptop was blinking back at me like it knew I was failing, and the words just… weren’t there. I had ideas, sure. Big ones. Explosive ones. But whenever I tried to catch them, they slipped through my fingers like smoke.
By John Smith2 months ago in Journal
Daily Liturgy — January 21, 2026
Today the Church celebrates the Memorial of Saint Agnes, Virgin and Martyr, and the liturgy invites us to reflect on courage, fidelity, and the quiet strength that comes from trusting God completely. As we continue through the Second Week in Ordinary Time, the readings place before us two powerful images of faith in action: the youthful confidence of David as he faces Goliath, and the steady, uncompromising mercy of Christ as He heals on the Sabbath. Together, they remind us that God’s power is often revealed not through force or status, but through obedience, humility, and love that refuses to yield to fear.
By Sound and Spirit2 months ago in Journal
Why Most Relationships Fail — Even When Love Feels Real. AI-Generated.
Why Love Alone Is Not Enough Most people grow up believing that love is the most important ingredient in a successful relationship. Movies, books, and social media constantly reinforce the idea that if two people truly love each other, everything else will somehow fall into place. Unfortunately, real life tells a very different story.
By AnikĂł FĂłnai2 months ago in Journal
The Woman Behind the Name
I used to think being known was a gift. Then I watched a woman walk into a room and become invisible the moment her husband’s name was called. One minute, she was herself—sharp-eyed, quick-witted, full of stories. The next, she was “the wife of,” a footnote in someone else’s narrative. Her degrees, her work, her dreams—all folded neatly into parentheses.
By KAMRAN AHMAD2 months ago in Journal
Diary of Anony Elle
I have been in Florida for a week now. It hasn't been easy. I don't have a whole lot of money to be able to afford a hotel room. Hell Im $100 short on bills and don't know how im going to eat tomorrow. I don't care. I have had to sleep outside in the elements a couple times and I DO NOT CARE!
By Anony Elle2 months ago in Journal
Paths of Service: Teaching to Outreach, Why?
Paths of service often start with teaching, but have you ever stopped to ask why teaching counts as service in the first place? Many people think of service as something physical, like volunteering or giving resources. Yet teaching is one of the most practical ways to serve because it equips people with understanding, confidence, and direction. In faith communities, teaching can happen through Bible classes, youth lessons, discipleship training, and small group discussions. Each of these settings helps people learn how to apply faith to everyday life.
By Mike Signorelli2 months ago in Journal
Daily Liturgy: January 20, 2026 – Tuesday of the Second Week in Ordinary Time
Today’s readings invite us to reflect on God’s extraordinary insight into human hearts and the gentle ways He calls us to serve Him. In the first reading from 1 Samuel, the prophet Samuel is sent to anoint the future king of Israel. When he sees Jesse’s sons, he is impressed by their outward appearances, but the Lord reminds him, “The Lord looks at the heart.” Samuel anoints David, the youngest son, a humble shepherd, chosen not for what the world sees but for what God perceives within. This reading teaches that God often works through the seemingly ordinary, calling forth greatness in ways that defy human expectation. The psalm echoes this theme, celebrating the faithfulness and guidance God grants to His chosen servants, reminding us that God’s perspective is always higher, wiser, and deeper than our own.
By Sound and Spirit2 months ago in Journal
Making Time for God: Daily Prayer in a Busy Life
Life is busy. Work, family, errands, and responsibilities often fill every corner of the day, leaving little space for reflection or prayer. Yet daily prayer is one of the most powerful tools a Catholic has for staying grounded, cultivating patience, and experiencing God’s presence in every moment. Finding ways to integrate prayer into a busy life is not about creating a rigid schedule; it is about building habits that allow moments of connection, however brief, to become transformative.
By Sound and Spirit2 months ago in Journal







