
What are your favorite websites?
People often ask me which websites I visit the most, expecting me to name a few — maybe YouTube for videos, Pinterest for ideas, or Reddit for random curiosities. But the truth is, I don’t really have a favorite. I browse through a lot of them, wandering from one digital corner to another, collecting knowledge, inspiration, and stories along the way.
I’ve always believed that the internet is like a vast, living library — endless shelves of thoughts, voices, and discoveries. Some days I find myself lost in articles about history or art; on others, I’m reading travel blogs, tech reviews, or essays about life. One link leads to another, and before I know it, I’ve learned something I never even set out to find.
That’s what I love most — the freedom of not knowing where I’ll end up. Every new site feels like a fresh doorway, a chance to see the world from someone else’s point of view. I don’t go online searching for favorites; I go online searching for wonder.
The beauty of browsing without boundaries is that knowledge comes to you in unexpected ways. A random blog might teach you something profound; a small forum might make you feel connected to strangers across the world. Each click adds a new layer to what I know and who I am becoming.
So no, I don’t have a list of favorite websites. I have moments of fascination — flashes of insight, laughter, curiosity, and calm — gathered from every corner of the web. For me, the joy isn’t in having one perfect site, but in the adventure of discovering a hundred imperfect ones that each leave behind a little spark.
Because in the end, it’s not about where you browse. It’s about what you take with you when you finally close the tab.