Shoutout
Why Unwritten Thoughts Are Lost Forever
There is a specific kind of loss that most people recognize only in hindsight: the realization that something once understood clearly has vanished without leaving a trace. It is not the loss of a fact, but the loss of a connection, a realization, or a way of seeing that once felt complete and meaningful. The mind remembers that something mattered, but cannot recover what it was. No record exists to return to. No artifact remains. The understanding did not fail. It simply disappeared.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcastabout 2 hours ago in Writers
AI Can Clarify Thought Instead of Replacing It
The Accusation Is About Origin, Not Appearance The accusation that using AI makes writing deceptive sounds strong because it targets authorship, not style. It implies that if a tool is involved at any stage, the final product is no longer truly yours. That assumption only holds if the tool is the source of the thinking. If the reasoning, direction, and conclusions originate elsewhere, then the presence of a tool does not transfer ownership. It only affects how the ideas are presented.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast2 days ago in Writers
Preservation as an Act of Care
Care is usually associated with people, not with ideas. It brings to mind attentiveness, patience, protection, and responsibility toward something fragile. Meaning rarely enters that picture. Thoughts are assumed to be abundant, replaceable, and endlessly renewable. If one is lost, another will come. This assumption feels practical, but it is wrong in a quiet and costly way. Some meanings are not interchangeable. Some insights arrive only once, shaped by a particular moment, a particular season, or a particular convergence of experience that will never repeat in the same form.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast3 days ago in Writers
Inside The Mind Of The Writers
Writing as a hobby becomes something more. It can become an infectious disease, without a cure. As it happens, it came to me during an infectious disease outbreak, and initially, there was no cure. Hell, there was no vaccine, there was no answer, and the world literally fell to pieces that year.
By The Man Behind The Mask6 days ago in Writers
Digital Graveyard Confessions
I used to pour my morning coffee, open my laptop, and genuinely trust the words staring back at me. Now, I sip my brew with a heavy dose of suspicion. I am being haunted. Not by spirits, but by soulless algorithms masquerading as articles written by ChatGPT otherwise referred as journalists that often name me in them for ranking. I am featured rich, poor, an aggresor or a victim depending who has written it.
By Narghiza Ergashova10 days ago in Writers
The Benefits Of Reviving Your Old Stories On Vocal
Introduction This is just a short piece about the benefits of reviving old stories (if you consider five years old in my case). I do treasure most of my Vocal writing and am disappointed when the Vocal Story fails to load. While I have the original text, I can't always remember the videos, pictures, links and other ephemera that I included. Also, I don't want to recreate the stories in case Vocal do get their act together and restore the failing stories.
By Mike Singleton 💜 Mikeydred 13 days ago in Writers









