Magazines
Story time: The powder in the lab – Newspaper
It was a bright, sunny morning. The sky was clear and I was up early. My head was throbbing and I felt a bit dizzy. To relieve this agonising pain, I decided to look for some painkillers.
Writhing in discomfort, I clambered noisily downstairs and started searching for medicine. I checked all the cabinets, drawers and even the first aid box, but to no avail. I could not find anything.
I stomped around the house looking for Mum. I didn’t see her anywhere, so I started calling out loudly; my own voice felt like someone hitting my head with a bat. Still, there was no answer.
Suddenly, I remembered that when my dad, a scientist, went to work in his small personal lab in the basement, he would always take some medicine with him.
The pain was now excruciating. I tiptoed downstairs. Dad didn’t allow us to go there in his absence, but I had no option. I thought I might find some painkillers there. Surprisingly, the door wasn’t locked. Carefully, I opened it. Inside, it was dark, but the switchboard was right beside the door, so I turned the lights on.
As the lights came on, I saw papers scattered on the table, along with glass containers filled with liquids and powders. There were bulky objects and machinery too. But I didn’t pay attention. My eyes searched the shelves and tables for familiar tablets.
Just then, I tripped and banged my head on the table, falling to the floor. One of the glass jars toppled over, hit my head and shattered into pieces. I started coughing as the powder got into my mouth, eyes and hair, basically all over me. This trip to the basement lab proved unsuccessful as I couldn’t find any medicines. Annoyed, I got up and went back to my room.
I went to the washroom and splashed water on my face, hoping the cold water would make me feel better. As I looked up into the mirror, I froze. I didn’t find my reflection in the mirror!
For a moment, I just stared, trying to make sense of it. I touched the mirror. It felt normal, solid and real. The door behind me was clearly reflected, but there was no sign of me.
Panic set in. I grabbed a towel, but it seemed to float in mid-air in the mirror. No hands were holding it, yet it moved as I wiped my face. That’s when it hit me — the powder in the lab! I had messed up.
The headache was forgotten as I rushed back to the lab and picked up the scattered pages. My heart sank as I read them. The powder was part of my dad’s experiment, and somehow, I had made it work. I had turned invisible!
Frantically, I searched through the papers, hoping to find a solution. After going through sheet after sheet, I finally found it. The effect would wear off in an hour.
I ran back to my room, shaken and full of regret. That one hour felt endless. Fear kept creeping in. What if I never came back? I paced restlessly, unable to sit still.
When my mother finally came home, I ran towards her in relief. But then I remembered — she couldn’t see me. I opened my mouth to speak, but before I could say anything, a strange tingling spread through my body. Slowly, bit by bit, I began to reappear.
When I was finally back to normal, a wave of relief washed over me. Right then, I made a promise to myself: I would never meddle with my father’s things again.
Published in Dawn, Young World, April 18th, 2026
Magazines
Earth Day 2026 – Newspaper
Here is something worth thinking about this Earth Day.
Earth is not asking for your help. It doesn’t send emails or text messages. Neither does it hold protests. It sends signals. Warnings. And you know what these are? Melting ice, rising seas, dying coral, seasons that don’t behave the way they used to.
We are not destroying Earth. We are destroying what makes it liveable — the air, the water, the weather patterns, and everything related to it. The planet itself will be fine. It has always been fine. Yes, Earth has survived things we can’t even imagine. It survived volcanoes, it saw a time when the oceans simply ran out of oxygen and most things living in them suffocated. Then there was the asteroid, the size of a small city, that hit Earth at full speed, wiping out the dinosaurs and most of everything else. Earth saw it and bore it. Five times, almost everything died. Five times, the planet kept going.
We are not the worst thing that has ever happened to this planet. But we might be the worst thing that has happened to ourselves.
The planet has survived far worse than us. The real question is: will we survive ourselves?
The secret agreement
Our atmosphere has always had normal and necessary levels of carbon dioxide in it that act like a blanket around the Earth. This blanket holds heat from the sun to keep the planet warm enough to live on.
So humans lived, cultivated, farmed, built, and dumped smoke, gas, and other pollutants into the Earth’s atmosphere. All of this was absorbed; the atmosphere kept the air safe and the weather stable.
But when the Industrial Revolution took place, things didn’t remain the same. The atmosphere was affected beyond anyone’s expectation. People started burning coal in enormous amounts to power factories, trains, and machines. More burning meant more carbon dioxide. More carbon dioxide meant a thicker blanket. A thicker blanket meant more heat getting trapped, resulting in the planet getting warmer. This is called the greenhouse effect.
To understand it better, let’s take the example of a car. If it is parked under the sun with the windows closed, the interior of the car will get extremely hot because the glass lets in the heat, but there is no way for it to escape. Carbon dioxide is doing the same thing to the entire planet.
That’s the science of what happened. A gas that was always there in safe amounts suddenly started building up faster than nature could balance it out.
What is actually happening
So now, Earth’s overall temperature has changed from what it used to be and is becoming warmer. Therefore, the oceans are warmer too, and this has directly impacted coral reefs.
Corals are dying
Coral reefs are beautiful, colourful ecosystems in the oceans, with a number of living organisms sheltering within them while fish swim around. About a quarter of all marine life lives in coral reefs.
But corals are delicate in one specific way: temperature. If the temperature rises even a couple of degrees above what they are used to, they bleach, meaning they turn white, and that means they die.
Large parts of the Great Barrier Reef, one of the greatest living systems on this planet, are already gone. It is one of the major environmental tragedies that should be talked about and addressed.
The glaciers are melting
For centuries, humans have looked at glaciers in awe. We paint them, we photograph them, and we write about them. Many mountains that people and even their grandparents grew up seeing are sadly not the same anymore. You can look at a photograph from 50 years ago and then look at the same mountain today and see bare rock where there used to be ice.
It is one of those changes that seems slow and distant until you actually see the pictures. Then the realisation hits differently. Glaciers are also where a huge portion of the world’s freshwater comes from — the water that fills rivers, that farmers use and that entire cities depend on.
Seasons are shifting
In many parts of the world, flowers bloom earlier and birds migrate at the wrong time. Animals that evolved to time their behaviour around temperature and daylight are finding that the cues they rely on no longer match up. Imagine a bee waking up in spring only to find that the flowers it depends on have not bloomed yet. And that’s not a small inconvenience , that’s the beginning of a collapse in a system that has been working for millions of years.
Your voice matters, but not the way you think
You’ve probably heard the list of things to do: use less plastic, take shorter showers, don’t leave the lights on, eat less meat, etc. These things are real and they matter.
The most useful thing a young person can do right now is to truly understand what’s going on. Not just “climate change is bad”, but actually knowing how it works, why it’s happening, who’s responsible, and what needs to change. Because when you understand it, you can talk about it. You can tell other people. You can ask hard questions. You can one day vote for people who will actually do something about it or refuse to buy from companies that don’t care.
Real change happens when the rules change, when governments say you can’t dump certain chemicals anymore, when it becomes cheaper to use solar energy than coal, and when big companies have no choice but to do better. That’s the scale where this problem is actually solved.
Before us. Possibly after us
There’s a tree in Sweden called Old Tjikko, a Norway spruce named by discoverer Leif Kullman after his dog. The trunk is a few hundred years old, but the root system beneath it is almost ten thousand years old. It survived the last ice age. It has been living underground, sending up new trunks as the old ones died, for longer than most human civilisations have existed.
That tree has no idea what’s going on, who lived and who died. It definitely doesn’t know about Earth Day. It’s just living the way it has been for ten thousand years, because the conditions around it allow it to.
And this is the whole point. Everything in nature is just doing what it does — trees, bees, glaciers, oceans. None of it is trying to survive. It just survives, as long as the conditions are right.
The question is whether we are going to be the species that is smart enough to look at what it is doing and actually change course. No other animal can do that. A shark can’t decide to fish less. A wildfire can’t decide to burn less. But we can decide. That’s the strange and almost unfair gift we have. So far, we haven’t fully used it. But we still can.
Happy Earth Day!
Published in Dawn, Young World, April 18th, 2026
Magazines
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Magazines
Movie review: The Myth of Maracuda – Newspaper
Have you ever felt useless or like a failure at home? Has being compared to others brought you down? Does trying to meet your parents’ expectations make you feel frustrated?
Don’t worry, The Myth of Maracuda, a Russian animated film, speaks directly to these feelings.
Inspired by old Slavic myths, the story follows a young boy named Maracuda in the Stone Age. He feels like a failure because he cannot hunt like others in his tribe. Maracuda loves nature. His father wants him to become a strong warrior, but he struggles to live up to that image.
However, things change when Maracuda meets Tink, a mystical bird who gives him the special ability to understand animals. With this gift, Maracuda returns home as a hero.
The Myth of Maracuda is a touching film that mixes folklore, emotion and the journey of growing up. The 90-minute ‘dubbed in English’ movie is directed by Viktor Glukhushin, who has worked as a visual effects director on films like Apollo 18, Wanted and Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter.
Russian animation itself has a long and rich history. It began in the early 1900s and became very popular during the Soviet era. After the 1990s, Russian animation grew again with new studios and modern styles. These films often use soft colours, deep ideas and stories inspired by folklore.
Coming back to The Myth of Maracuda, the film becomes most powerful when Maracuda meets Tink in the magical forest. It’s a turning point in Maracuda’s life, as the story shifts from failure to self-discovery and empathy. The film highlights kindness, understanding and emotional strength as true courage.
The film’s main conflict is also very powerful. Maracuda’s tribe believes that the sacred bird must be sacrificed for their prosperity. Maracuda makes a difficult choice between following tradition and protecting the one who helped him. This moment gives the film real depth and meaning and requires real courage.
Inspired by classics like The Lion King and Brother Bear, The Myth of Maracuda creates its own identity. It reminds us that true bravery is not about power, but about understanding, empathy and standing up for what is right.
Published in Dawn, Young World, April 18th, 2026
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