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Reflection: Oh, what dumb viral trends!

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Illustration by Aamnah Arshad
Illustration by Aamnah Arshad

It was way past midnight. But still, my cousin Zainab was displaying no signs whatsoever of putting down her phone and going to sleep.

She had come over for a few days during the winter holidays and I had offered to share my room with her. But now, I was starting to think it wasn’t a really good idea. At last, I couldn’t bear it any longer.

“What exactly are you watching that is so interesting it can’t wait until morning?” I boiled over.

“See for yourself. Here… isn’t it the cutest thing you ever saw?” she said and handed me the phone.

“Whoa! What is this thing?” I asked.

“It’s a Labubu doll. This vlogger has a whole collection of them. They are so adorable,” she said.

“I believe the right word is ‘ugly!’” I retorted.

“Oh, come on! They’re cute. Besides, it’s the latest trend. Celebs are crazy for these! I have already ordered one online,” she said.

“Seriously? Are people buying these scarecrows? Why did you waste your money on such a thing? It is not even good-looking, let alone ‘cute’!” I was literally surprised.

“You know what? Just go to sleep and lecture me in the morning,” she replied and dropped the conversation, leaving me pondering the absurdity of internet trends.

Two days later, I contacted my friend Najia. The phone call lasted for one hour. I asked her what she had been doing lately.

“Nothing much. I had a lot of schoolwork to catch up with and had to make it up to my enraged mother,” she replied.

“Why? What happened? Did you break her favourite vase or something?” I inquired.

“No, that wasn’t the case. I had actually tried the viral trend of smearing your hand with sanitiser and setting it alight, thinking it wouldn’t burn. But the flame caught the sleeve of my shirt and, before I could throw water on it, it had burnt the skin of my forearm. And now my mother’s really angry about it. She said I was mad to even think of doing such a dangerous thing,” she explained.

“Okay, let me process this… you deliberately set your hand on fire under the influence of a dumb trend!” I almost screamed.

“Yeah… but it looked so thrilling… anyway, let’s talk about something else,” she said in an annoyed tone. So, we talked about random stuff for a while before ending the call.

To all those reading this right now, can you actually believe it? With such stupid trends, we can’t say where the world is heading. And this is not it. The other day, I went to attend Maria’s birthday party. The room was decorated so grandly that it seemed ridiculous. Just then, I saw Maria. She was wearing a white T-shirt with stains of mud on it.

“Did you fall into a puddle or something?” I asked.

“Seriously, man. This is the latest fashion. These mud stains are fake!” Maria answered, looking as though I had asked something completely dumb.

I know most readers would be thinking, “It’s not true!” If you don’t believe me, satisfy your doubts and Google it yourself.

Another day, my friend Sarah was showing me her art journal. One of her sketches was of a ballerina with a cup of coffee for a head. She told me it’s “Ballerina Cappuccino”, an AI-generated viral photo by Brainrot.

“Doesn’t this look weird?” I asked.

“I believe it looks rather pretty,” she said.

“Like the Labubu dolls?” I asked again.

“You know about those?” she inquired.

“Yeah,” I chuckled. “A cousin of mine is crazy for them.”

“Well, you know, I Googled the reason people are obsessed with such trends, and it said that they just don’t want to be left out. It’s called FOMO — Fear of Missing Out,” she explained.

So, long story short, people everywhere are following and keeping up with the latest (dumb) trends just because other people are doing the same and no one wants to look strange. Like Naila, who spent her pocket money on a luxury mini purse in which only an earbud can fit, saying to me, “What do you know about fashion!”

Or maybe Sana, who showed up at the school fair wearing her jacket backwards, telling me, “It’s the latest fad.”

I think I’m glad I’ve got common sense. I can tell what is stupid or logical, dangerous or harmless. I’m happy that I didn’t burn my hand doing that trick or make myself look cringe by wearing a “trendy” outfit. I’m content being ignorant of these dumb yet viral trends. I think I’ve got JOMO — Joy of Missing Out.

Published in Dawn, Young World, February 14th, 2025



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The weekly weird

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Cow seen using tools for first time

www.huffingtonpost.com, www.upi.com, www.apnews.com
www.huffingtonpost.com, www.upi.com, www.apnews.com

Researchers in Austria have recorded what is believed to be the first known case of a cow using tools. The study focuses on Veronika, a Swiss brown cow in Carinthia, who was seen using sticks and brushes to scratch herself.

Scientists from the University of Veterinary Medicine in Vienna say Veronika has been picking up pieces of wood for years and later began using a long brush, choosing different parts depending on where she wanted to scratch.

The findings, published in Current Biology, suggest cows may be more cognitively capable than often assumed. Researchers note that Veronika’s actions were clearly intentional and she uses the same tool in flexible ways rather than randomly.

Moon hotel opens early bookings

www.huffingtonpost.com, www.upi.com, www.apnews.com
www.huffingtonpost.com, www.upi.com, www.apnews.com

A California start up has begun accepting deposits of up to $1 million for rooms at what it claims will be the world’s first hotel on the Moon, planned to open by 2032. Final room prices are expected to exceed $10 million.

Founded by 21-year-old Skylar Chan, GRU Space plans to build the hotel using robots that turn lunar soil into building blocks. Construction is expected to begin in 2029, pending approvals. Chan says the project reflects a future where humans may live beyond Earth.

Flat freezes into ice castle

www.huffingtonpost.com, www.upi.com, www.apnews.com
www.huffingtonpost.com, www.upi.com, www.apnews.com

An apartment in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, turned into a real-life ice castle after a tenant switched off the heating while away on holiday to save money. When owner Jacques Nault entered the flat earlier this month, he found the walls, ceiling, furniture and appliances coated in thick ice, with nearly 30 centimetres covering the floor.

The extreme cold caused water pipes to burst, leading to tens of thousands of dollars in damage. Nault said rising living costs may have influenced the decision, but warned it was a costly mistake. The tenant was evicted and the apartment now needs major repairs, with insurance expected to cover part of the cost.

Ancient olive tree still bears fruit

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www.huffingtonpost.com, www.upi.com, www.apnews.com

In Ano Vouves, Crete, one of the world’s oldest living olive trees continues to produce olives after around 3,000 years. The protected tsounati olive tree has a massive trunk measuring about 12.5 metres in circumference and grows from wild olive stock.

Its exact age cannot be confirmed, as olive trees rot from the inside as part of natural renewal, but ring studies show it is at least 2,000 years old. Scientists believe it could be closer to 4,000. The tree attracts thousands of visitors each year and has survived droughts, fires and centuries of human activity.

Published in Dawn, Young World, February 14th, 2026



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Story time: New beginnings

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Illustration by Aamnah Arshad
Illustration by Aamnah Arshad

Deep down in Felicity’s Yarn Shop lived a light pink yarn. That’s me. I’m not exactly enjoying my time here. Every day, I stare out, hoping that today will finally be the day someone takes me home.

For the past 795 days, I’ve watched every other yarn get chosen, one after the other. Even the newcomers get chosen, but me? I’m still here. Lonely. I’m the only yarn left in the beige basket. I wish… I really wish someone would pick me today.

Oh, look, there’s Felicity’s regular customer, Anna. Anna is looking for pink yarn. She doesn’t like hot pink, rouge, puce, Barbie pink or neon pink. The only pink yarn left is light pink — that’s “me”. I was bound to be chosen. I closed my eyes and hoped that I would be held.

And… yay! Anna chose me. My heart sang with excitement. I was extremely glad she chose me instead of all those show-off pinks.

Now I’m at Anna’s place, in her room and I’m enjoying it a lot. Anna has already started crocheting. Is she going to turn me into a cosy scarf? A baby blanket? A pink flower? There are so many possibilities. I try talking, hoping to ask Anna what she’s making… but then I remember I can’t speak. I’m an inanimate object!

So far, everything Anna has crocheted has been amigurumi — the Japanese art of crocheting or knitting small, stuffed yarn creatures or objects, often with cute, oversized heads and small bodies. I suppose that means I’ll be an amigurumi toy too!

And guess what happened next? I’ve become an amigurumi axolotl. And I love my new identity. I literally look so cute with those tiny eyes, those adorable fins and that little bow on my right ear. Oh… my God! I don’t look anything like the lonely yarn I was just a day ago.

I soon realise that Anna has a crochet website called “The Amigurumi Artist”. When she took me, packed me neatly in a satin sheet and then placed me inside a nice little box — my home — I was being sold to someone named Cindy. I hope Cindy is just as kind and caring as Anna.

My trip to my new home was smooth. When the box was opened, I saw a cute girl looking at me excitedly. Her smile made my day and my life felt worthwhile. Cindy is really nice, kind, gentle and a little shy too! Hopefully, she treats me the same way she seems. Now I’m at Cindy’s place, and it’s amazing. She placed me carefully on her side table and I hope I’ll live a wonderful life here.

It has been a week since I moved to Cindy’s home and I’m really enjoying it. Sometimes Cindy hugs me gently; sometimes she dusts me and cleans me like I’m precious. From a forgotten yarn in a beige basket to a cherished amigurumi axolotl… life feels stitched together perfectly now. Maybe yarn can’t speak, but somehow I found a way to be heard — through the love stitched into every loop of who I’ve become.

Published in Dawn, Young World, February 14th, 2026



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Story time: A driving lesson from my mum

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“STOP!” they shouted. I slammed the brakes and the car jerked to a halt, jolting all of us forward.

“When I say stop, do stop!” scolded Mum.

“Oh… aah… no…,” gasped my sister as she looked beyond me, into a gaping hole dug into the ground, bigger than our car, that we would have fallen into. My heart beat fast as I slowly and carefully shifted into reverse and backed up.

Learning to drive isn’t easy, at least not for a constantly zoning-out person like me. Anyway, what happened next was, I think, the most embarrassing part.

For the last twenty minutes of my turn to drive, and for half an hour before that, when it was my sister’s turn, a young chap had been riding his bike around the ground where we were practising. And no, it wasn’t normal biking. He was pulling all kinds of illegal and dangerous stunts, like a performer in some circus. I know that sounds mean, but he kept circling us, clearly putting both us learners and himself in danger.

I turned and steered the car towards the cricket pitch where I was supposed to practise when Mum, my instructor, noticed two policemen scolding the biker. I looked up too and saw them giving him one or two smacks.

“Ah,” I smirked. “Now he won’t even try to disturb us.”

Once again, my heart dropped into my shoes as Mum shouted, “Stop!”

Why me? Oh no. I would never decipher an instruction in one go.

“STOP!” they both screamed.

I pushed hard on the brake, making our guts somersault inside our tummies.

“When I say stop, you have to stop! You didn’t see such big rocks, beta? I thought you’d turn!”

“Oh, they were so big, Amna, I saw them from so far away….” my sister joined in.

Frozen, I slowly turned towards Mum, who had now shut her eyes tight in frustration. I shifted into reverse, hoping we could escape the rocks that way.

“No, switch to drive,” Mum said slowly.

I drove on. GRRRRRRRR.

“Stop. STOP!”

I braked, sighing.

“Reverse. Reverse the car!”

I reversed.

We jerked back suddenly.

“Stop, STOP!”

I braked, and then I saw them. Two huge rocks, far bigger than the bricks used to build walls, lay right in front of us. I gulped.

As we drove home, I sulked in my seat. I thought of never learning to drive with my mum again. I was annoyed, angry and hopeless.

But back at home, while washing my face, something struck me. Why lose the chance to learn driving over small, silly emotions that practically meant nothing? Learning to drive was far more important. My mum taking time out to teach me during my vacations was far more important.

I sighed. No pain, no gain. And no more zoning out, my brain!

Published in Dawn, Young World, February 14th, 2026



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