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Valeria Carballo

I live in Barcelona, Spain. Two years ago, my daughter suggested I rent out part of my apartment to tourists. At first, I resisted. The idea of strangers in my home unsettled me—what if they were noisy or disrespectful? But my pension was small, and I needed the extra income. Reluctantly, I turned my spare room into a guest space, listing it online with my daughter’s help.

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Jury Karimov

The first time I saw my father in uniform, I thought he looked taller. Stronger. The kind of man who could protect us from anything. My mother smiled and kissed him goodbye at the door, holding back tears she didn’t want him to see. I was thirteen then. He ruffled my hair and said, "Take care of your mother and sister." Then he was gone.

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Salma Bhuyan

The needle moves fast, the machine humming like a restless insect. My fingers work from memory, guiding the fabric under the presser foot, stitch by stitch. I don’t need to think; my hands know the rhythm better than I know my own face in the mirror. The sweat clings to my skin, the heat of the factory pressing down like an iron weight. The fans overhead barely stir the thick air.

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Josef Gassner

I have walked this street thousands of times, but it never truly belongs to me. The cobblestones remember footsteps that should have never been. Tourists come with their cameras, their curiosity, their hushed voices. Some shake their heads in disgust, others, the ones who disturb me most, arrive with something close to reverence. I avoid looking at them. It’s easier that way.

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Mai-Nhi Nguyen

The sun burns white-hot in the late morning, and the air hums with the sound of cicadas. I walk home from school, my feet dragging against the uneven pavement, my backpack heavy with books. My uniform sticks to my back. I could take the bus, but the coins in my pocket are for later, for something more important.

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Kjell Erlandsen

The storm came in fast. One moment, the sea was restless but manageable, the sky thick with grey clouds. The next, the wind screamed through the steel skeleton of the platform, and the waves below rose like moving walls. I was in the middle of a routine check on the gas separators when the first real gust hit, nearly knocking me off balance. Over the radio, the shift supervisor’s voice crackled. "All non-essential personnel inside. Now."

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Jamila Ngomane

I woke up before the sun, the way I always have. The air was still cool, the sky that deep blue just before the light spills over the horizon. I sat up slowly, my back protesting, my knees stiff. The years do that. Seventy-two of them, and each one leaving its mark. Outside, the first birds were already calling, and I could hear the distant sounds of women moving through the village—feet brushing against the packed earth, voices low and familiar.

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Leo Dumont

The bass vibrates through my bones before I even step onto the stage. My name flashes in neon, the crowd roars, hands reaching for me like I’m something more than I am. I should feel powerful. Instead, I feel like I’m drowning. This is my life. A different city every night, thousands screaming my name, my beats controlling their highs.

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Renita Bermudez

The dust settles on the street outside the shelter, kicked up by restless feet. People come and go, looking for answers no one has. I sit on the thin mattress they gave me, listening to the low murmur of conversations, the occasional sobs muffled against tired hands. My son is outside, trying to find work—any work. I tell him not to take risks, not to trust strangers, but what choice do we have?

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Rajan Dasanayaka

The mornings are still quiet in my neighborhood, but they carry a different weight now. It is not the kind of peace that comes from stability—it is the heavy silence of uncertainty. The election has passed, and the results have not brought relief, only more questions. The same faces remain in power, promising recovery, but for people like me, the numbers on paper mean little. The price of rice has not fallen. The electricity bill still makes my heart sink. The pension I worked for my entire life remains a joke.

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Anastasia Glushko

The first time I met Danylo, he was leaning against the wall of a volunteer center, rolling a cigarette with steady hands. He looked up when I passed, his eyes catching mine in a way that made my steps falter for just a second. I had come to help organize supplies—medical kits, blankets, canned food. Anything to keep people alive. He was there for a different reason. A soldier waiting to return to the front, caught between two worlds: war and whatever remained of normal life.

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Simba Mugabi

It started with a man pacing outside my shop in Kampala, Uganda, hesitating like he couldn’t decide whether to come in or run. I see all kinds of people—thieves trying to sell stolen phones, desperate customers begging for impossible repairs, teenagers who just want to browse and touch things they can’t afford. But this man was different. He was well-dressed, not flashy, just neat. The kind of person who doesn’t usually look lost.

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Margret Egilsson

The wind here smells of salt and cold earth, pressing against the windows with a force that makes the glass tremble. I sit by the window, watching the grey sky settle over the sea, as I have done for many years. It is a quiet ritual, one that reminds me I am still here. I was born in a small house in Kópavogur, Iceland, before it became the town it is today. Back then, the streets were fewer, the nights darker, the winters harder.

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Colin Livingstone

I come from a small place in Scotland called Alexandria. On my doorstep is the gigantic Loch Lomond. I have been fishing there since I was a child. Usually, it's more of the smaller fish that I catch. But last week, I caught the biggest fish of my life so far. It was so heavy that it even broke my fishing rod. I was drenched in sweat after the catch, it was incredibly exhausting. It was a huge pike, over 20 kilos.

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Vesna Kurtovic

That night, I walked home alone, the air thick with the scent of the sea, but my mind still replaying the moment over and over. The shock in their eyes. The silence that followed. My mother’s forced smile, too tight, like the fabric of a dress that doesn’t fit. My sister’s hand tightening around her boyfriend’s, as if I had announced something dangerous. My uncle clearing his throat, looking at his plate as if he had just discovered something deeply fascinating about mashed potatoes.

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Samir Balayev

Fixing cars was never the plan, but life doesn’t ask for permission. It moves forward, drags you along, and sometimes, if you’re lucky, drops you where you need to be. I was born and raised in Baku, a city that hums with the rhythm of both tradition and modernity. As a teenager, I spent hours locked in my room, headphones pressing against my ears, listening to everything from classical mugham to Western electronic beats.

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Asha Ugaas

The fish slipped from my fingers, landing with a dull thud on the dirt floor. The boy behind the counter laughed, shaking his head. "You’re too tired, Asha. You need rest." Rest. The word itself was a luxury. I wiped my hands on my dress and picked up the fish again, this time gripping it tightly. "Rest won’t feed my children," I said, handing over the crumpled shillings. "Maybe in another life."

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Christos Stefanidou

It was a summer evening, the kind where the air is thick with the scent of thyme and salt, and the cicadas sing until your thoughts dissolve into the landscape. I live in Crete, Greece, and had been walking along the cliffs near Loutro, following a narrow path that I had known since childhood. Below, the Libyan Sea stretched dark and endless, the waves whispering against the rocks.

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Abbey Wildhorse

Mrs. Caldwell caught me humming in algebra again. She sighed, tapping her fingers on the desk. "Keep your focus on the equations, not your… performance." Snickers rippled across the room. I sank lower in my chair, my face burning. I hated school. Not just because of the math problems, but because every day felt like a test I hadn’t studied for. I didn’t talk the right way, dress the right way, believe the right way. My family’s name was a joke, our faith a punchline.

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Thong Sayavong

I grew up in a village where the Mekong runs slow, where my father planted rice and my mother sold herbs at the market. Life was steady, simple, but never easy. When the railway project began, everything changed. Our house stood where the new tracks were planned, and we were told to leave. The money they offered was small, not enough to rebuild the life we had.

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