Story cover for SEEDS OF KNOWLEDGE  by mirroringlife_s
SEEDS OF KNOWLEDGE
  • WpView
    Reads 583
  • WpVote
    Votes 5
  • WpPart
    Parts 31
  • WpHistory
    Time 2h 53m
  • WpView
    Reads 583
  • WpVote
    Votes 5
  • WpPart
    Parts 31
  • WpHistory
    Time 2h 53m
Complete, First published Feb 16
Welcome, reader! 

This is not your typical story. 'Seeds of Knowledge' explores insightful concepts and offers perspectives designed to inspire and uplift. While drawing on real-world knowledge, the narrative presents these ideas in a creative and interpretive way. I hope it resonates with you and touches many lives. Feel free to share it!
 



- Author













 
Disclaimer:
 
'Seeds of Knowledge' blends factual information with creative interpretation. While based on research, the presented perspectives are subjective and open to individual understanding. Enjoy the journey!
All Rights Reserved
Sign up to add SEEDS OF KNOWLEDGE to your library and receive updates
or
#82giveitatry
Content Guidelines
You may also like
Secretly Ours by misrielunspoken
34 parts Ongoing
Everyone loves a good love story-especially the ones that unfold onstage. But what if the greatest love story of all was never meant to be seen? What if the truth was hidden in plain sight-in quiet glances, private jokes, and years of carefully kept silence? To everyone else, Missy Maramara and Ariel Diccion are just close friends-creative collaborators from SPIT Manila, always seen together, always in sync. People whisper, speculate, even tease them about being secretly married. But they always laugh it off, brush it aside, and return to their carefully constructed narrative. What no one knows is that the rumors are true-just not in the way anyone expects. For nearly twenty years, Missy and Ariel have been living a quiet, hidden marriage. They chose to keep their relationship secret for the sake of their careers, their privacy, and most of all, their daughter, Milliesse Ariella Maramara Diccion-known as Millie, Elly, or illisse, depending on who's asking. To the world, she's the daughter of Missy and the child raised by a kind, ever-present "Tito Dad." But behind closed doors, in the safety of their home, she knows the truth: she is the daughter of two people deeply in love, bound not only by art and friendship, but by the life they've built in secret. Only two others- Monica and Chester-know the full story. Everyone else sees only the act: a man who stepped in to help raise a friend's child, a woman strong enough to do it on her own. But the reality is far more complicated, far more beautiful. Millie has grown up between what's real and what the world is allowed to see. And while the performances continue, their family's truth lives quietly in glances, gestures, and the love hidden just out of sight. They've lived behind the curtain for so long. But now... will they finally tell the world about the love they've hidden-and the truth about who Ariel really is to Millie: not just the man who stepped in, but her real father all along?
You may also like
Slide 1 of 10
Dating The Campus Cupid cover
Secrets of Manifestation cover
Secretly Ours cover
Read people like a book✓ cover
Summary Of Dark Psychology by James W. Williams cover
Book of Quotes cover
Psychology cover
Before I Let You Go | Poetry cover
Unique Character Names cover
Words Of Wisdom  cover

Dating The Campus Cupid

63 parts Complete

Known as the match maker, and love card player, with a bit bad personality, yet a really soft hearted person. Her name was Ayesha Zyril Ching, the one and only match maker on one of the most known educational institution on their place; Dream High Indeed, the world is too playful, that it unexpectedly played with her. Her oh-so-plain life suddenly got some thrill when the door of her past suddenly opened. Questions suddenly fill her mind. Pain arise from her heart. As her tears flows like a river in so much agony. Will this Cupid take courage to take step to the door of her past despite of being so painful, or choose to live a new life and burry all of her memories in the past?