Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Motivation.
The Power of Presence: How Influential Women on LinkedIn Are Shaping the Future of Leadership
In the modern professional landscape, influence is no longer confined to the boardroom. It has moved into the digital sphere, specifically onto LinkedIn. For women leaders, founders, and executives, the platform has become a vital stage for thought leadership, networking, and industry-wide impact. Understanding the role of Influential Women on LinkedIn is essential for any professional looking to build a personal brand or find inspiration from the frontlines of business.
By influentialwomenmagazine16 minutes ago in Motivation
. “I Don’t Know Who I Am Without Achievement”
don’t know who I am when I’m not achieving something. Without a goal, a grade, a deadline, or a win, I feel like I disappear. I didn’t always notice it. For a long time, it felt normal—praised even. Teachers loved me because I performed well. Family members introduced me using my achievements instead of my name. “This is the one who always tops the class.” “This is the one who never wastes time.” I learned early that being valuable meant being impressive. Achievement became my language. If I didn’t know how to explain myself, I let results speak. A good score meant I was worthy of rest. A promotion meant I deserved happiness. Applause became proof that I existed. The problem was, no one ever asked who I was when the applause stopped. Every milestone felt like relief, not joy. I wasn’t celebrating—I was exhaling. Surviving. For a moment, I could finally stop running. But the silence never lasted long. Almost immediately, another question appeared: What’s next? And with it, the familiar anxiety. If I wasn’t climbing, I must be falling. If I wasn’t improving, I must be failing. So I kept moving. I filled my days with productivity and my nights with quiet fear. I stayed busy because stillness felt dangerous. In stillness, there were no metrics to protect me. No rankings. No feedback. Just me. And I didn’t know what to do with that version of myself. When people asked what I enjoyed, I panicked. Enjoyment felt unproductive. Useless. I didn’t know how to like something without being good at it. I didn’t know how to rest without guilt chasing me. Even hobbies turned into competitions with invisible finish lines. I measured my worth in output. If I produced, I was enough. If I didn’t, I wasn’t. Failure didn’t just hurt—it erased me. One bad result could undo years of effort in my mind. I didn’t see mistakes as part of learning; I saw them as proof that I was nothing without success. When things didn’t go well, I didn’t think, I failed. I thought, I am a failure. That belief followed me everywhere. In conversations, I felt the urge to justify my existence. To explain what I was working on. To show that I was still moving forward, still relevant, still worth listening to. Silence made me uncomfortable because silence didn’t showcase progress. Burnout arrived quietly. Not as exhaustion, but as numbness. Achievements stopped feeling real. Even the big ones felt hollow, like cardboard trophies. People congratulated me, and I smiled, but inside I was already afraid of losing the feeling they gave me. I was addicted to becoming, but I had no idea who I already was. The scariest moment wasn’t failure—it was success. Because after reaching something I’d chased for months or years, there was nothing left to distract me from the emptiness underneath. No goal to hide behind. No ladder to climb. Just a question I had avoided my whole life: Who am I if I stop proving myself? I didn’t know the answer. And maybe that’s the part no one prepares you for. School teaches you how to perform. Society teaches you how to compete. Social media teaches you how to compare. But no one teaches you how to exist without measurement. We grow up believing value is earned, not inherent. That love is conditional. That rest must be justified. So we build identities out of accomplishments and call it ambition. We wear exhaustion like a badge and call it discipline. But somewhere along the way, we lose ourselves. I’m learning—slowly, imperfectly—that I am more than what I achieve. That my worth doesn’t disappear on days when I do nothing. That I don’t have to be impressive to be human. Some days I believe it. Some days I don’t. Unlearning a lifetime of performance is hard. Sitting with myself without chasing validation feels uncomfortable, like standing in a room without mirrors. But I’m trying. I’m trying to find joy that doesn’t need to be shared. Rest that doesn’t need to be earned. A sense of self that doesn’t collapse when productivity stops. I don’t have a clean ending or a dramatic transformation. Just an honest truth: I’m still figuring out who I am without achievement. And maybe that’s okay. Maybe being lost isn’t failure. Maybe it’s the first time I’m actually being myself.
By Faizan Malik24 minutes ago in Motivation
The Secret of the Lion’s Whisker. AI-Generated.
Once, in a quiet village nestled at the edge of a vast forest, there lived a woman who was deeply unhappy. Her husband, though a provider, possessed a temperament as harsh as a winter storm. He was quick to anger, constant in his criticism, and his words often carried a sting that left her heart heavy with sorrow. Desperate for a life of peace and affection, she decided to seek the counsel of a wise old hermit who lived in the mountains, a man known for his deep understanding of the human soul.
By Said Sadiq 32 minutes ago in Motivation
The Power of Presence: How Influential Women on LinkedIn Are Shaping the Future of Leadership
In the modern professional landscape, influence is no longer confined to the boardroom. It has moved into the digital sphere, specifically onto LinkedIn. For women leaders, founders, and executives, the platform has become a vital stage for thought leadership, networking, and industry-wide impact. Understanding the role of Influential Women on LinkedIn is essential for any professional looking to build a personal brand or find inspiration from the frontlines of business.
By influentialwomenmagazineabout 3 hours ago in Motivation
The real Access Codes to Higher Dimensions
💗 Many teachers explore the ascension process, spiritual enlightenment, awakening, and the higher dimensions. Nowadays, words like vibrations, energies, frequencies, and higher dimensions are often used as marketing tools. Yet, the teachings behind them remain deeply valuable and insightful. What’s truly beautiful is that much of this knowledge is now widely accessible, often for free, allowing people all over the world to benefit from it.
By Jeanne Jess about 4 hours ago in Motivation
Compassion in a Judgmental World
We may often be shocked when watching the news, wondering why some people do what they do. The statistics of suicide are not going down, despite modern medicine, modern technologies, and all the online help, books, and other tools available today. In the past, certain things, like a person drinking alcohol for example, became the gossip in the village. Now that gossip has simply moved online and spread across the world. Judgments and criticisms are everywhere, fast, quick, and often filled with pain and misunderstanding.
By Jeanne Jess about 4 hours ago in Motivation
The Day He Stopped Waiting
Ayaan had always believed that his real life would begin later. Later, when he felt confident. Later, when circumstances improved. Later, when he was finally “ready.” For now, he stayed stuck in preparation mode, convincing himself that waiting was wisdom. He read motivational quotes, watched long videos about success, and made detailed plans in his notebook. Every plan was neat, every goal ambitious, but none of them ever crossed the line into action.
By Sudais Zakwanabout 4 hours ago in Motivation
Creating Better Karma
Karma, awakening, enlightenment, those are all words people toss around in the most superficial ways. But what does it truly mean for our own life’s path? And, more importantly, can we change our karma - and make it better? Yes, we can. Of course we can; and changing it will transform us on every level of our being.
By Jeanne Jess about 5 hours ago in Motivation
Patient Bloom
In a quiet corner of an old garden, a gardener planted a tiny seed into soft, dark soil. He did not expect flowers the next day. He did not stand over the soil demanding progress. Instead, he watered it gently, protected it from harsh winds, and walked away with patience in his heart.
By Active USA about 5 hours ago in Motivation
Stability Is a Form of Courage. Content Warning. AI-Generated.
There comes a stage in adult life where collapse is no longer dramatic—it is inconvenient. You cannot afford to fall apart loudly. Too many things rely on you continuing to function: income, schedules, family expectations, professional roles, and unspoken agreements you never formally accepted but still feel obligated to honor. At this stage, healing no longer looks like retreat. It looks like negotiation.
By Chilam Wongabout 10 hours ago in Motivation
Let (it) Go
Losing my job didn’t happen in a dramatic way. There was no argument, no raised voices, no outright admission of discrimination. Instead, it came wrapped in softer language—performance concerns, operational needs, not the right fit. What those phrases really meant was simple: I could no longer function in the way an able-bodied retail worker was expected to.
By Millie Hardy-Simsabout 12 hours ago in Motivation











