Author: Imrul Hasan

This is Imrul Hasan's profile, and this is a bit of copy about him. He grew up in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Imrul is a Wordpress developer, Linux Server Expert, Software Tester, Blogger, and Cyclist. He’s known for his love of cats, but is also crazy about movies, dogs, coffee, sea and mountains.
Japan’s Quiet Intimacy Shift: Why Sex, Romance, and Connection Are Being Rewritten
Culture, Relationships, World

Japan’s Quiet Intimacy Shift: Why Sex, Romance, and Connection Are Being Rewritten

Japan’s relationship with sex and intimacy has become one of the most quietly fascinating social transformations of the modern era. It rarely announces itself through scandal or outrage. There are no sudden revolutions, no explicit cultural bans, no dramatic moral campaigns. Instead, the change reveals itself through statistics, personal testimonies, and a growing sense that something fundamental about how people connect has shifted. Over the past few decades, rates of sexual experience and activity in Japan have declined sharply. Large-scale reviews of sexual behavior research show that around half of Japanese adults reach their mid-twenties without ever having had sex, and approximately 10 percent remain virgins into their thirties. Even more striking, surveys conducted throughout the 2...
When Children Were Mailed: The Strange True Story of America’s Brief Postal Loophole
Crime, History

When Children Were Mailed: The Strange True Story of America’s Brief Postal Loophole

In the early twentieth century, the United States was still stitching itself together. Vast rural distances separated families, roads were unreliable, and train tickets were a luxury many could not afford. Then, in 1913, a quiet bureaucratic reform changed daily life in ways no one fully anticipated. The United States Postal Service introduced Parcel Post—a revolutionary system designed to make long-distance shipping affordable for ordinary Americans, especially those living far from cities. For the first time, people could send large items through the mail at reasonable rates. Farmers shipped produce. Families mailed clothing, tools, and household goods. The postal carrier became not just a letter deliverer, but a trusted logistical lifeline. What lawmakers didn’t realize was that they ...
Before Fatherhood Begins: How a Man’s Life Quietly Shapes the Next Generation
Lifestyle, Mental Health

Before Fatherhood Begins: How a Man’s Life Quietly Shapes the Next Generation

For much of modern science, inheritance followed a simple story. A father contributed DNA, a mother carried the pregnancy, and everything else was shaped after birth by environment and upbringing. Responsibility for early biological influence leaned heavily toward maternal health, while paternal contribution was framed as largely fixed and passive. Epigenetics has quietly dismantled that story. Research over the past two decades now shows that sperm does not arrive at conception as a neutral container of DNA. It carries chemical instructions shaped by a man’s body, habits, and environment in the months before conception. These instructions do not change genes themselves, but they influence how genes behave—when they turn on, when they stay quiet, and how strongly they act during early de...
Cotard’s Delusion: When the Mind Becomes Convinced It Is Already Dead
Mental Health

Cotard’s Delusion: When the Mind Becomes Convinced It Is Already Dead

Imagine being alive, breathing, speaking, walking—yet being absolutely certain that you do not exist. That your organs have vanished, your blood has stopped flowing, or that you died long ago and are now nothing more than a hollow shell. This is not metaphor, poetry, or philosophical despair. It is a rare and devastating psychiatric condition known as Cotard’s delusion. Often called “walking corpse syndrome,” Cotard’s delusion is one of the most extreme disorders of self-perception ever documented, challenging our understanding of consciousness, identity, and what it means to feel alive. What Is Cotard’s Delusion? Cotard’s delusion is a nihilistic delusion in which a person believes that they are dead, do not exist, have lost their internal organs, or are entirely empty. Some pa...
Troxler’s Effect: Why Your Brain Erases Reality When You Stare Too Long
Health

Troxler’s Effect: Why Your Brain Erases Reality When You Stare Too Long

Have you ever stared at a spot on the wall, a dot on a screen, or your reflection in a mirror—and noticed that everything around it slowly fades, distorts, or disappears entirely? That strange, almost unsettling experience is not a glitch in your vision. It’s a feature of your brain. It’s called Troxler’s Effect, and it reveals something profound about human perception: your brain does not passively record reality—it aggressively edits it. What Is Troxler’s Effect? Troxler’s Effect (or Troxler fading) is a perceptual phenomenon where unchanging visual information disappears from conscious awareness when you fixate on a single point. Discovered in 1804 by Swiss physician and philosopher Ignaz Paul Vital Troxler, the effect shows that when the eyes stop moving and a stimulus re...
Why Many Women Feel Colder Than Men: Biology, Evolution, and the Quiet Intelligence of the Human Body
Health

Why Many Women Feel Colder Than Men: Biology, Evolution, and the Quiet Intelligence of the Human Body

For years, the experience has been casually dismissed. A woman reaches for a sweater while a man opens a window. Office air conditioning sparks silent suffering on one side of the room while the other feels perfectly comfortable. Jokes are made. Assumptions follow. Sensitivity, imagination, exaggeration. But science tells a very different story. The reason many women feel colder than men in the same environment is not psychological, cultural, or imagined. It is biological. Deeply, measurably biological. Rooted in muscle mass, circulation patterns, metabolic efficiency, hormonal signaling, and evolutionary design, this difference reflects how human bodies regulate energy, preserve warmth, and prioritize survival. Understanding this is not just about temperature preference. It is about re...
The Shadow That Would Not Die: Why Jeffrey Epstein Became a Cultural Phantom
Crime, World News

The Shadow That Would Not Die: Why Jeffrey Epstein Became a Cultural Phantom

Some figures do not disappear when they die. They mutate. Jeffrey Epstein is one of them. His body may have left the cell, but culturally, he never left the room. Instead, he became something else: a symbol. A cipher. A mirror reflecting everything modern society fears about power, secrecy, and the cost of believing that institutions protect us. This is not because people are irrational. It is because Epstein’s story landed at the exact fault line where trust collapses. https://www.revlox.com/crime/the-epstein-files-and-the-lolita-express-what-we-know-what-was-proven-and-what-still-haunts-the-record/ When Evil Wears a Suit, Not a Mask For centuries, cultures imagined evil as external. Monsters lived in forests. Demons wore horns. Villains announced themselves. But Epstein broke...
Gods Without Altars: Epstein and the Shape of Power in the Modern Age
Crime, World News

Gods Without Altars: Epstein and the Shape of Power in the Modern Age

Modern society insists it has outgrown religion. We tell ourselves we are rational now, data-driven, secular, immune to myth. Yet nothing reveals the lie of that belief more clearly than the way we respond to figures like Jeffrey Epstein. Because what unsettles people is not merely what he did. It is what he represented. And what he represented feels uncomfortably familiar in the modern world. Epstein became the silhouette of a new kind of god—one without temples, without scripture, without moral obligation. A god of access. Of exemption. Of consequence-free movement through the world. And modern culture already knows how to worship such gods. The New Sacred Order Is Invisible In ancient civilizations, power announced itself. Temples rose above cities. Priests wore symbols. Ki...
The Epstein Files and the “Lolita Express”: What We Know, What Was Proven, and What Still Haunts the Record
Crime, World News

The Epstein Files and the “Lolita Express”: What We Know, What Was Proven, and What Still Haunts the Record

Few modern scandals sit at the intersection of power, secrecy, and sexual exploitation as starkly as the case of Jeffrey Epstein. Central to public fascination—and outrage—are the so-called Epstein files and the private jet infamously nicknamed the Lolita Express. Together, they symbolize how abuse can be enabled by wealth, networks, and silence—and why accountability remains so contested. What follows is a careful, fact-based look at what these terms actually mean, what has been proven in court or documented by records, and where uncertainty and speculation still persist. Who Was Jeffrey Epstein? Epstein was a wealthy financier with elite social connections spanning politics, finance, academia, and entertainment. In 2008, he pleaded guilty in Florida to a state charge of solici...
The Max Headroom Incident: The Night Chicago’s TV Got Hijacked by a Mask, a Message, and a Mystery That Never Died
Mystery

The Max Headroom Incident: The Night Chicago’s TV Got Hijacked by a Mask, a Message, and a Mystery That Never Died

On a quiet Sunday night in Chicago—November 22, 1987—television did something it wasn’t supposed to do. Not a glitch. Not a storm outage. Not a station error that a tired anchor could laugh off with a shrug. What happened that night felt… personal. Like someone had climbed into the screen and stared back. For a few seconds, then for more than a minute, two different TV stations had their broadcasts hijacked by a bizarre pirate transmission featuring a person wearing a Max Headroom-style mask. The image was jittery, surreal, and unsettling—like a punk-art performance that accidentally wandered into millions of living rooms. Engineers scrambled. Viewers called stations. And law enforcement got involved. Yet, despite the chaos and the fame of the footage, the biggest part of this story rem...
Maximizing Freshness: How to Store Fruits and Vegetables at Home
Food, Health

Maximizing Freshness: How to Store Fruits and Vegetables at Home

Properly storing fruits and vegetables can significantly extend their freshness, prevent spoilage, and help reduce food waste. Most households rely on standard refrigerators and pantries (or countertops) to keep produce fresh, but using these spaces wisely makes all the difference. This guide will explain why certain storage methods work (the science of temperature, humidity, and ethylene gas), highlight common mistakes to avoid, and offer practical, category-specific tips (from leafy greens to citrus fruits). With the right techniques, you can get the most out of your groceries – saving money and enjoying fresher, safer produce at home. General Principles of Produce Storage Temperature and Respiration: Fruits and vegetables are alive and “breathe” (respire), which means they gradual...
Remembering Federico Fellini — The Man Who Taught Cinema How to Dream
Movies, Personalities

Remembering Federico Fellini — The Man Who Taught Cinema How to Dream

On this day in 1920, in the coastal town of Rimini, Italy, Federico Fellini was born—a filmmaker who would go on to reshape the language of cinema itself. To remember Fellini is not simply to revisit a body of films; it is to step into a world where memory, fantasy, desire, fear, religion, and spectacle dissolve into one another. His cinema does not explain life. It re-enacts it—exaggerated, distorted, tender, grotesque, and profoundly human. Fellini did not believe in realism as truth. He believed in emotional truth, the kind that emerges from dreams, childhood recollections, erotic fantasies, and private anxieties. “I am a liar,” he once said, “but an honest one.” In that paradox lies the essence of his genius. From Rimini to Rome: A Childhood That Became Myth Fellini’s films ...
Blink and You’ll Miss Him: A Birthday Celebration of Evan Peters
Personalities

Blink and You’ll Miss Him: A Birthday Celebration of Evan Peters

Some actors demand attention the moment they step onscreen. Others earn it quietly, by disappearing so completely into their roles that you forget there is an actor at all. Evan Peters belongs firmly to the second group. On his birthday, it feels fitting to celebrate not just the characters he has played, but the rare, shape-shifting talent that has made him one of the most compelling performers of his generation. Peters is the kind of actor who slips under the skin. He doesn’t chase likability or heroism; instead, he explores vulnerability, instability, humor, and darkness with the same intensity. Over the years, he has built a career defined not by repetition, but by constant reinvention. Early Life: A Quiet Start to an Unusual Career Evan Thomas Peters was born on January 20, 1987,...
Remembering David Lynch on His 80th Birthday: The Dreamer Who Taught Cinema How to Dream
Hollywood, Movies, Personalities

Remembering David Lynch on His 80th Birthday: The Dreamer Who Taught Cinema How to Dream

On David Lynch’s 80th birthday, it feels insufficient to simply call him a filmmaker. David Lynch is better understood as a cartographer of the subconscious, a painter who traded canvas for celluloid, a sound designer who sculpted silence as carefully as noise. More than anyone else in modern cinema, Lynch taught audiences that films do not need to explain themselves to be meaningful. They need only to feel true. Lynch did not just make movies. He created states of mind. To encounter his work is to enter a dream where logic dissolves, emotions sharpen, and meaning drifts just beyond reach—familiar yet unsettling. His films do not ask to be understood in the conventional sense. They ask to be experienced, absorbed like music or remembered like a half-forgotten nightmare that refuses to fa...
The Lost Skill of Relaxation: Why Letting Go Feels So Hard—and Why It Matters More Than Ever
Health, Mental Health

The Lost Skill of Relaxation: Why Letting Go Feels So Hard—and Why It Matters More Than Ever

Relaxation used to be a natural state. It happened in the pauses between tasks, in long evenings, in moments when time wasn’t measured down to the minute. Today, relaxation has become something we schedule, optimize, and often feel guilty about. We sit still, yet our minds remain clenched. We rest, but we do not relax. This is not because humans forgot how to relax—it’s because modern life quietly trained us not to. To understand relaxation is to understand tension. Most tension is not muscular. It is psychological. It is the constant low-level grip we keep on ourselves: monitoring performance, tracking progress, anticipating the next demand, judging whether rest is deserved. Even when nothing is happening, the mind stays on alert, scanning for what should happen next. True relaxation b...
When Feelings Refuse to Behave: The Quiet Power of Naming Emotions We All Recognize
Mental Health

When Feelings Refuse to Behave: The Quiet Power of Naming Emotions We All Recognize

Most human emotions arrive without asking for permission. They don’t line up neatly, don’t follow scripts, and rarely announce themselves with clarity. We feel them instantly, viscerally—yet struggle to explain them. Language often fails us at precisely the moments we need it most. We know what we’re feeling, but not how to say it. This is where lesser-known emotional words matter. Not because they invent new feelings, but because they name experiences we’ve always had. They give shape to emotional states that exist in the gray areas between desire and discomfort, effort and exhaustion, wanting and letting go. Two such words—hanker sore and liberosis—sit at opposite ends of an emotional spectrum. One describes what happens when attraction becomes destabilizing. The other names the quiet ...
When the Gut Becomes a Brewery: How Bacteria Can Make the Body Intoxicated Without Alcohol
Health

When the Gut Becomes a Brewery: How Bacteria Can Make the Body Intoxicated Without Alcohol

For most people, feeling drunk has a clear cause: alcohol consumption. But for a small number of individuals around the world, intoxication can occur without a single sip of beer, wine, or spirits. They slur their words, lose coordination, feel dizzy or euphoric—and sometimes even fail breathalyzer tests—despite being completely sober by choice. This baffling condition is known as autobrewery syndrome, and new research is finally clarifying what’s really happening inside the body. A recent study led by University of California, San Diego researcher Bernd Schnabl, with contributions from scientists including Elizabeth Hohmann of Harvard University, provides the strongest evidence yet that the syndrome is primarily driven by specific gut bacteria that ferment food into alcohol inside the di...
Record Declines in U.S. Homicide Rates: Understanding the Largest Drop in Murders Since the 1950s
Crime, World, World News

Record Declines in U.S. Homicide Rates: Understanding the Largest Drop in Murders Since the 1950s

In recent years, public perception in the United States has often suggested that violent crime is spiraling out of control. Headlines, social media, and political rhetoric have reinforced a sense of growing danger. Yet behind this perception lies a striking and historically significant reality: the United States has experienced one of the largest declines in homicide rates since national crime data began being systematically recorded in the mid-20th century. According to analyses of FBI crime statistics, provisional CDC data, and independent criminology research, U.S. homicides dropped sharply in the most recent reporting periods—by levels not seen since the post-World War II era. In some cities, murder rates fell by more than 20 percent in a single year. Nationally, the decline represent...
First Homicides of 2026: Case Studies from Chicago, the Bronx, and London
Crime, World, World News

First Homicides of 2026: Case Studies from Chicago, the Bronx, and London

The opening days of a new year often carry symbolic weight. Headlines speak of fresh starts, resolutions, and renewal. Yet, almost every year, that symbolism collides with a harsher reality: the first recorded homicides of the year. These early cases do not define an entire year’s trajectory, but they do offer a revealing snapshot of the social, economic, and situational pressures that persist beneath the calendar reset. In 2026, the first homicides reported in cities such as Chicago, The Bronx, and London highlight how violence emerges in different forms across very different urban landscapes—yet often follows strikingly similar patterns. Chicago: A Familiar Pattern in a Familiar Setting Chicago’s first homicide of 2026 occurred within hours of the new year. The victim, a man i...
High-Profile 2026 Trials: Billionaire Sex Assault Cases and Multi-Homicide Accusations
Crime, World, World News

High-Profile 2026 Trials: Billionaire Sex Assault Cases and Multi-Homicide Accusations

The year 2026 has opened with courtrooms around the world under intense scrutiny. From billionaires accused of sexual assault to defendants facing charges in multi-homicide cases, several high-profile trials are shaping public conversation about power, accountability, and the limits of wealth, influence, and reputation. These cases are not just legal proceedings; they are cultural flashpoints, reflecting how societies respond when extreme privilege or extreme violence collides with the justice system. What unites these trials is not similarity in crime, but similarity in impact. Each case tests whether institutions can function impartially when the stakes are enormous and the attention global. Billionaire Sexual Assault Trials: Power Under Cross-Examination Sexual assault cases ...