Muhammad Sabeel
Bio
I write not for silence, but for the echo—where mystery lingers, hearts awaken, and every story dares to leave a mark
Stories (308)
Filter by community
FBI Warning—Do Not Install This App On Your PC Or Smartphone
It always starts the same way—with a message you weren’t expecting. You’re going about your day when a text pings your phone or a popup flashes on your laptop. It warns you that your bank account is under attack or your device has been compromised. Then it tells you exactly what to do next: call tech support. Click the link. Install the app. Hurry—your money’s in danger.
By Muhammad Sabeel8 months ago in Futurism
The 10-Minute Rule That Saved My Mornings from Chaos
Before the Rule: Mornings Were a War Zone The alarm rang. I hit snooze. Again. By the time I actually got out of bed, I had exactly 27 minutes to shower, get dressed, make breakfast, pack my bag, check emails, and somehow appear like a functioning adult.
By Muhammad Sabeel8 months ago in Blush
The Sunday Reset: A Ritual That Makes My Week 10x Easier
The Spiral Before the Ritual For years, my Mondays felt like slamming face-first into a brick wall. I’d stumble out of bed already behind, scrambling to find clean clothes, skipping breakfast, and replying to emails mid-bite. By Wednesday, I’d be exhausted. By Friday, I’d lost track of half my tasks and forgotten three important birthdays.
By Muhammad Sabeel8 months ago in Blush
Creative Challenges and Prompy
At 3 AM on a Tuesday, Maria sat staring at her laptop screen, cursor blinking mockingly at the beginning of an empty document. She had all the freedom in the world—write anything, about anything, in any style she wanted. Yet somehow, that infinite possibility felt more paralyzing than liberating. Then she remembered the writing challenge her friend had sent her: "Write a complete story using only questions. 500 words. You have one hour." Suddenly, her fingers began to move, and by 4 AM, she had crafted one of the most compelling pieces she'd ever written.
By Muhammad Sabeel8 months ago in Writers
Family Dynamics and Sibling Relationships
Emma still remembers the day her parents brought her baby brother home from the hospital. At four years old, she had been the center of her universe for what felt like forever, basking in the undivided attention of two doting parents. Suddenly, this tiny, wrinkled stranger commanded everyone's focus, leaving Emma feeling displaced and confused. Twenty-five years later, Emma and her brother share an unbreakable bond, but the echoes of that early displacement still influence how they interact—and how Emma approaches relationships in general.
By Muhammad Sabeel8 months ago in Families
When the Sun Kissed the Cornfields: A Tale of Rural America
You never really leave the land you were born on. You might board a bus, pack your bags, or build a new life in a city skyline—but the dirt stays under your nails, the sunrise lives in your bones, and the whispers of cornfields never fully leave your ears.
By Muhammad Sabeel8 months ago in Feast
Hearts for Sale
In the quiet glow of a smartphone screen at midnight, Sarah thought she had finally found her soulmate. Marcus was everything she had been looking for: successful, charming, and refreshingly honest about his past struggles. Their conversations flowed effortlessly across continents, bridging the gap between her small town in Ohio and his supposed oil rig work in Nigeria. Three months and $45,000 later, Sarah discovered that Marcus—along with his profile photos, his stories, and his promises—was entirely fictional.
By Muhammad Sabeel8 months ago in Criminal
Songs that get stuck in your head (earworms)
It's 3 AM, and you're lying in bed trying to fall asleep when suddenly, without warning, your mind begins to play the opening bars of "Don't Stop Believin'" for what feels like the thousandth time today. You didn't choose this musical moment—it simply appeared, uninvited, like an overly enthusiastic house guest who refuses to leave. Welcome to the fascinating, sometimes maddening world of earworms.
By Muhammad Sabeel8 months ago in Beat
Miss Gloria and the Case of the Grand Prize Sandwich
Miss Gloria Whitaker had never won anything in her life. Not a spelling bee. Not a game of bingo. Not even the church raffle that had only seven entries. She was the type of woman who played for the joy of participation, always cheered for others, and said things like, “Winning isn’t everything, darling. Sometimes it’s just about showing up in your best pearls.”
By Muhammad Sabeel8 months ago in Humor











