I can hear the streets calling my name from a mile away.

seen from Malaysia
seen from Germany
seen from Colombia

seen from Romania
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Romania

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom
I can hear the streets calling my name from a mile away.
Diamonds in Our Bones
A story pondering integrity, monetization, and sensationalism - and book titles!
We’re dismantling walls — dissociative, exclusive, existential — and this is just the beginning; the rest is up to the readers, the internet
763 words, 3-5 minutes read time
Stories of healing, perseverance, and hope: This is how we are living, recovering, and thriving with Dissociative Identity Disorder. New article every Wednesday!
What The Puck - How Much?
Here’s the short, clear answer: “The Park Avenue Buried Gold Hypnosis” isn’t a recognised term in psychology, hypnosis, criminology, or folklore. Nothing in reputable sources - clinical, historical, or cultural - uses that phrase - as a standard concept.
But the shape of the phrase is interesting, and there are a few plausible origins depending on where you encountered it.
🧩 What the phrase could refer to
1. A fictional or metaphorical phrase
It sounds like the kind of title used in:
pulp detective fiction
urban-legend‑style short stories
hypnotism stage acts
self‑help or “manifestation” marketing
conspiracy‑flavoured YouTube content
I could be wrong, but I don't think so, because the structure - 'Park Avenue' + 'Buried Gold' + 'Hypnosis' = classic sensationalist titling.
Friendly reminder
Whenever the doomsday clock moves a second, it's not worth getting alarmed over.
That, my friends, is sensationalism. I'm not going to outright accuse the people in charge of political favoritism, but it is not entirely due to what's going on in the world.
Just don't fuckin panic people.
Everyone’s Wrong About Christmas & Paganism
Every year people claim Christmas is pagan—and every year there is debate about it.
Dickens, Reade, and Collins, sensation novelists; a study in the conditions and theories of novel writing in Victorian England, by Walter C. Phillips, PH.D.
Description
Tools
Cite thisExport citation fileMain AuthorPhillips, Walter Clarke, 1881-Language(s)English PublishedNew York, Columbia university press, 1919. SubjectsCollins, Wilkie, > Collins, Wilkie, / 1824-1889 > Collins, Wilkie, / 1824-1889 / Criticism and interpretation. Reade, Charles, > Reade, Charles, / 1814-1884 > Reade, Charles, / 1814-1884 / Criticism and interpretation. Dickens, Charles, > Dickens, Charles, / 1812-1870 > Dickens, Charles, / 1812-1870 / Criticism and interpretation. Sensationalism in literature. English fiction > English fiction / 19th century > English fiction / 19th century / History and criticism. NoteLemcke & Buechner, New York, stamped on t.-p. Physical Descriptionix p., 1 l., 230 p. 21 cm.
I don’t like sensationalist bullshit okay!