It would be striking up a conversation with a stranger, where I would share that instant chemistry with and enjoy their attention, connection and the impromptu friendship and vulnerability.

This is an anonymous story collected from the public as part of the Human Archive Project

It would be striking up a conversation with a stranger, where I would share that instant chemistry with and enjoy their attention, connection and the impromptu friendship and vulnerability. That gives me an unexpected happiness - as it gives some sort of hope that this conversation and acquaintance could grow into something more? A guilty pleasure/confession is feeling very satisfying, watching people who offended me and hurt me get their Karma pay-back, which always makes them suffer x10 more than what they did to me. That makes me happy and scared of my own self at the same time. The other confession is that there are some guys that would come across to me as intelligent and arrogant and hard to get - I like to use that chemistry I have with them and act completely uninterested and cold - other times low-key flirt - and just play with their minds. I need to stop doing that though.

it was a place where what I knew to be socially acceptable, or "normal", was glaringly absent.

This is an anonymous story collected from the public as part of the Human Archive Project

I tried to take my life the second time last December. It was serious enough that I had to be admitted to the hospital, in a mental health ward. The duration of the hospital stay was long - slightly more than a week. While I was in there, I managed to recuperate, and to take stock of my life, and to seek treatment for severe depression. That my time in the hospital was unpleasant is an understatement. The ward was filled with patients suffering from a myriad of mental health problems; it was a place where what I knew to be socially acceptable, or "normal", was glaringly absent. Spatially, I felt a sense of entrapment and claustrophobia, and this feeling was made worse by the dim lighting, the general misery, and lack of mobility of the ward's inhabitants.

Yet, it was also during my time there that I was able to experience something life-changing; a serendipitous and fortuitous encounter as it were. I remember noticing, albeit briefly, a particular nurse, and there and then, I remember thinking to myself that there was something tender, gentle, and special about this person. The vibe that pulsated from her was inexplicably positive. I also heard her singing to an old man in a voice that was bright and dulcet, like the trill of a canary.

She smiled at me a couple times, and introduced herself to me shyly, though professionally, when she had to check my belongings. She remained merely an impression, a figure of compassion I would remember as a patient, as a stranger. (Until) On the day I was supposed to be discharged, she came up to me and handed me a present wrapped, as well as a card, sealed in a transparent ziplog bag. Then she said to me cryptically: "This is for you. But you must promise to open the present and read the card ONLY after you leave the ward". I looked at her quizzically, with raised eyebrows and replied: "Ok...."

But I kept my word. I also told myself I'd buy her a present in return, and I decided too that I would leave her my contact details. I got home that night and proceeded to unwrap the present. It was two books about pain and hope. But what sent me into a whirl of shock, surprise, and disbelief was when I read the opening lines of her card: "Dear Ms _____, I can only address you this way because I had the honour of seeing you in school ten years ago." She was a student in the school I used to teach in. I never taught her, but she recognized me. What were the odds, I wondered, of seeing a someone like her in a mental health facility where I was the patient? What were the odds of meeting someone like her when I was at one of the lowest points in my life? But the odds happened. She wrote to me a few weeks later, and we started talking in earnest. It felt surreal then. It still feels surreal now. It is as though I have known her all my life. Today, I can say with thankfulness, gratitude, certainty, and amazement - that I have found my kindred spirit. It took so many twists and turns, so much disillusionment and disappointment, and a powerful dose of kismet to meet her. And I wouldn't exchange it for anything.

Unexpected happiness comes when I connect with kindred spirits

This is an anonymous story collected from the public as part of the Human Archive Project

Unexpected happiness comes when I connect with kindred spirits, who share my passion for people, ideas and nurturing a community of creative souls. It’s come in the midst of crisis, when we overcome challenges together, and the happiness comes from knowing that anything is possible when the right people come together.

IT'S BEEN DIFFICULT TO FIND HAPPINESS, AS THERE ARE SOME DEMONS THAT KEEP CREEPING UP ON ME.

This is an anonymous story collected from the public as part of the Human Archive Project

It's been difficult to find happiness, as there are some demons that keep creeping up on me. On the outside I may seem happy, but this is often not the case. I find true happiness when I have a drink and let go of everything, except this tends to bite me harder the next day. Oh well, you have to keep plodding along.

After becoming the Mother of two three years ago, I decided to take a pause on my corporate career and much unexpected happiness happened to me and my life.

This is an anonymous story collected from the public as part of the Human Archive Project

Longing to be an artist but never got the chance growing up in China. After becoming the Mother of two three years ago, I decided to take a pause on my corporate career and much unexpected happiness happened to me and my life.

So, how many mushrooms is my life worth ?

This is an anonymous story collected from the public as part of the Human Archive Project

Heard a "new" word recently - Fungible. How fungible is human life? To what extent can human life serve as a fungible currency? I quote Prof Peter Redfield "The question is far from abstract, as measures of life play an increasingly central role in int'l moral discourse 'n' justification for ....actions. Key metrics in global health like DALY, rest on assumed equivalences. NGO fundraising brochures, along with extensions of consequentialist ethics, suggest easy conversions between money and lives." So, how many mushrooms is my life worth ?

I felt a quiet happiness

This is an anonymous story collected from the public as part of the Human Archive Project

This morning, I woke up early. All was quiet and very dark. I felt peaceful and safe. All around me, my family slept, all peaceful and safe too. I felt a quiet happiness. This moment is perfect. If I could just stop time and live in this moment, when we are all well and all is well with us.

The loneliest time was when I was with someone and the relationship was not quite right but I was too scared to admit it.

This is an anonymous story collected from the public as part of the Human Archive Project

Getting divorced after only 6 months of marriage allowed me to discover who I really was, what my values are and what make me happy. The loneliest time was when I was with someone and the relationship was not quite right but I was too scared to admit it.

In the midst of a rain of tears, I texted to a friend "my heart is breaking". He replied - "think about what is truly breaking".

This is an anonymous story collected from the public as part of the Human Archive Project

I was in an emotionally and physically abusive marriage for several years. From the outside you wouldn't know. I was and am a feel happy, confident and strong woman. But, was I truly when it mattered? In the most intimate and vulnerable of spaces, I was unhappy, doubtful, apprehensive and indecisive. The divorce came to me as a shock (I don't even know why). I did not initiate it, though I wish I had shown the resolve and clarity. The knowledge of infidelity came as an even larger surprise. The subsequent lies and aggression through the divorce took quite a toll. In the midst of a rain of tears, I texted to a friend "my heart is breaking". He replied - "think about what is truly breaking". In that instance, as I tried to answer him, the clouds of emotion started clearing. I started seeing my life with as much clarity and objectivity as I usually can of others. I saw the blessing. I saw the hollowness of the relationship that I was clinging on to. The image of a life together that, in reality, was an image, a figment of my imagination, not the truth. In that moment, I saw the rainbow. There has been no turning back.

All I can see is shadows of past dreams and windows gloating at me

This is an anonymous story collected from the public as part of the Human Archive Project

I was once sure of what I wanted, when I was a child. But as I grew up, I realised my options grew with me too. So I tried to narrow them down to a few routes. And I started walking on those routes. And so, I walked and walked even as the ground started to feel more bumpy and I started regretting and doubting. Was it because, I really wasn't as good as I thought? Why did I feel stumped the more further away I went and my shoulders heavier with the weight of doubt and insecurity?

When I was young, whenever I felt downtrodden by my failures, somehow I had the drive to go on. In the past, things were clearer to me, which road I would take and not look back. But now, I look down and the road has stopped. Countless times, I have looked back, unsure of my decisions. Now I am blocked by my own fear. I see people far away, achieving greater things yet they are so much younger than me. I know it doesn't actually matter the age as long as you keep trying, but with each tick-tocking, I feel rushed. Rushed to not disappoint my younger self, to reach somewhere, to achieve something. As the time passes, the sound grows louder and faster. And yet, I find myself on a standstill. Turning back from where I am, I no longer know where I want to go, the directions in my mind are a jumbled mess. What am I going to do now? The roads are no longer clear to me. All I can see is shadows of past dreams and windows gloating at me , the success that seems unreachable, that I didn't try hard enough. That I wouldn't make it anywhere. That I am nothing. So I close my eyes and try to sleep these feelings away.

I am in love with someone who is not married to me

This is an anonymous story collected from the public as part of the Human Archive Project

I am in love with someone who is not married to me. He makes me laugh and he gives good advice.

Feeling utterly helpless

This is an anonymous story collected from the public as part of the Human Archive Project

I am from mainland China, and there should be a respect amongst our people, Sometimes there is, but often I am very depressed or made to feel inferior. I don’t think that most people mean this to happen, it is just an attitude that starts unconsciously. I must support my father.  At the time when we were feeling utterly helpless,  he was the one who offered us the warmest home and greatest help.

I can be dehumanised

This is an anonymous story collected from the public as part of the Human Archive Project

It is as if because I am foreign I can be dehumanised, I could be seen as just a service or object. Also because I cannot always communicate clearly a barrier comes down, and I think it seems like I am not intelligent because I cannot speak. I am seen as quiet and docile as I am unconfident. But I speak three languages. My english is only poor.

Others cannot look me in the eye

This is an anonymous story collected from the public as part of the Human Archive Project

I am a construction worker. I make the buildings and the pavements, working very long hours which are not legal. I used to earn only a few dollars a day, now I earn 18 dollars. I save it and send to my son who I love more than anything. People here do not understand my existence, I am just part of the machinery. It hurts when others cannot look me in the eye. I am a moral dilemma they cannot address. I feel like I am not myself anymore, all my personality and life has drained away, all I do is work, and that is all others see too.

Every time I lie

This is an anonymous story collected from the public as part of the Human Archive Project

I am an electrical engineer, but my agent tricked me into a ship cleaning job. There is too much work. Sometimes the bricks we are transporting fall on our backs. We eat dinner but we do not get lunchtime or tea breaks. Mine is a not rich country but it has a rich culture. Myanmar people are friendly. Things like water are free in my home. Here we have no money so we cannot buy it.  I love my mum so much, so I came here to work. When my mum calls me, I tell her everything is OK, I am not tired, everything is OK. Every time I lie.

I work 21 hours a day

This is an anonymous story collected from the public as part of the Human Archive Project

I arrived in Singapore to work on the ships. I work 21 hours a day, sleeping is not possible, we get 45 minutes break only after the work is finished, so in total in we get 3 hours of sleep a day. I now cannot see from my right eye. The injury happened last year, I reported to my supervisor, but they did not make arrangements. Although I still cannot see I am happy because Myanmar Embassy have tried to help me, and they have seen that my company is no good, they took my passport.

We are both human but are treated differently

This is an anonymous story collected from the public as part of the Human Archive Project

We’re not perfect but we are doing our best. We’re working hard to accomplish the tasks on your list. Why must you call us stupid, lazy and idiot. We are both human but are treated differently. Do not treat us like a prisoners. Do not treat us like a robot. Do not treat us as if you own us. Yes you pay, but we work so hard. You pay for the service but you do not own our life.