About UnspokenQuestions
UnspokenQuestions.com is a free reading library focused on the personal, family, relationship, and career questions that people often hesitate to ask out loud. The aim is plain-language general guidance — a starting point for your own thinking, not a replacement for therapy, medicine, law, or finance professionals.
Who the site is for
The content is organized by life stage and situation rather than by jargon. Four broad audiences anchor the library:
- Young adults navigating identity, mental health, early relationships, education and career, finances, and independent living.
- Parents and caregivers looking for help with communication, age-appropriate boundaries, child development, and digital-life questions.
- Couples working on communication, intimacy, conflict, and growing together over time.
- Working professionals thinking about workplace relationships, career advancement, and work-life balance.
If your situation cuts across more than one category — most do — feel free to read across categories.
How content is written
Pages are AI-assisted: they are drafted with a large language model, then reviewed for tone, accuracy of general framing, and avoidance of overstated claims. We do not publish invented experts, fake testimonials, fabricated statistics, or proprietary research. Where research consensus exists on a topic, we describe it in general terms and link to organizations or books where readers can dig deeper.
Each page is written to do three things: name the question honestly, lay out the common ways people experience it, and give practical starting points. We try to keep paragraphs short, avoid hype, and resist the urge to promise outcomes.
What the site does not do
- It does not diagnose, prescribe, or counsel. Mental-health, medical, legal, and financial topics are written for general orientation only.
- It does not collect personal stories, host a forum, or invite readers to submit private information.
- It does not promise specific outcomes from reading. Real change in any of these areas usually involves time, support, and often a qualified professional.
Editorial approach
Three principles shape the writing:
- Plain language over jargon. If a word would land better in a textbook than a kitchen-table conversation, it usually gets cut.
- Range over recipe. Most of these topics admit several reasonable approaches. Pages favor describing the trade-offs over prescribing the one right answer.
- No invented authority. No fabricated stats, fake quotes, or made-up credentials. When pages mention a body of research, they say so generally and point readers to a reputable starting place if they want to read more.
Pages are dated with a "Last reviewed" line so you can see when the content was last refreshed.
Funding
The site is supported by display advertising, including Google AdSense. Ads do not influence editorial content, and we do not accept paid placements within articles. If a future change to that policy ever happens, it will be disclosed clearly on this page.
Get in touch
For corrections, takedown requests, or general feedback, see the Contact page. Privacy questions belong on the Privacy page.