<p>Nobody knows how hard it is to be “her”</p><p>The girl who laughs loudly so nobody hears the sadness hiding underneath it.</p><p>The girl who says “I’m fine” because she got tired of explaining pain nobody ever stays long enough to understand.</p><p>People only notice her anger.</p><p>Never the hurt beneath it.</p><p>They do not see the little girl still living inside her, the one who learned too early that love could disappear without warning. The one who grew up believing she had to earn softness, affection, reassurance, safety.</p><p>So now she overthinks everything. Every tone change. Every dry text. Every moment someone pulls away slightly. Because heartbreak did not just break her heart. It changed the way she sees herself.</p><p>Now she stares at mirrors too long. Pulls at her clothes. Questions if she is pretty enough, skinny enough, lovable enough. And it hurts because she remembers promising herself when she was younger that she would never hate her body. Yet somehow she became the kind of girl who covers herself even when she is overheating, who compares her face to strangers online and loses every single time.</p><p>And honestly, being a girl feels exhausting sometimes because no matter what you do, the world always seems to want something different from you.</p><p>If she has slept with more than one boy, she is a slut.</p><p>If she is a virgin, suddenly she is “too innocent” or not woman enough.</p><p>If she dresses modestly, she is boring.</p><p>If she dresses revealing, she wants attention.</p><p>If she wears makeup, she is fake.</p><p>If she does not, people ask if she is tired.</p><p>If she is beautiful, people assume that is all she has to offer.</p><p>If she is intelligent, suddenly she is intimidating.</p><p>If she wants kids, people act like that should be her entire purpose.</p><p>If she does not want kids, people call her selfish.</p><p>If she has a boyfriend, people judge her relationship.</p><p>If she is single, people ask what is wrong with her.</p><p>If she cries, she is dramatic.</p><p>If she stops reacting, she is cold.</p><p>And then there is the pain nobody talks about enough.</p><p>The kind that lives inside her body every single month.</p><p>The cramps that make her curl into herself quietly at night.</p><p>The exhaustion that makes even getting out of bed feel impossible.</p><p>The sudden sadness, irritation, anxiety, emptiness she cannot always explain properly.</p><p>One moment she feels okay, the next she feels like she is drowning inside her own mind while the world still expects her to smile normally through it all.</p><p>Go to school.</p><p>Go to work.</p><p>Reply messages nicely.</p><p>Be soft.</p><p>Be patient.</p><p>Be pleasant.</p><p>As if bleeding and hurting silently is something small.</p><p>People laugh and call girls “moody” without understanding how mentally exhausting it is to carry physical pain while still trying to function like nothing is wrong. Some girls cry more during those days and hate themselves for it. Some become distant. Some feel ugly in their own skin. Some feel emotionally unstable and guilty for needing reassurance.</p><p>But nobody really stops to ask if she is okay.</p><p>After a while, girls start becoming cruel to themselves before anybody else even gets the chance to be. That is why so many girls struggle to look at themselves kindly. Why mirrors feel painful sometimes. Why compliments feel unbelievable. Why one insult stays in our heads for years.</p><p>Nobody talks enough about how exhausting girlhood actually is.</p><p>The fear.</p><p>The pressure.</p><p>The constant feeling of being perceived.</p><p>Walking home carefully. Checking behind you at night. Feeling uncomfortable when men stare too long. Growing up hearing stories about girls who were hurt and realizing it could easily happen to you too.</p><p>Then going home carrying family problems, stress, shouting, pressure, expectations. Trying to focus in school while your mind already feels heavy from life itself. Trying to succeed while secretly feeling like you are falling apart.</p><p>And somehow girls are still expected to carry all of this beautifully.</p><p>Even our pain has to look acceptable.</p><p>Nobody sees her crying in bathrooms. Nobody sees her sitting on the floor during sleepless nights wondering why she feels so difficult to love. Nobody sees how badly she wants to be held without feeling ashamed for needing it.</p><p>They just see “attitude.”</p><p>“Too emotional.”</p><p>“Hard to deal with.”</p><p>But hurt girls are always misunderstood. Because people love soft girls until softness starts bleeding.</p><p>People say girls are too emotional without realizing how much pain girls are forced to hold quietly. Maybe being “too emotional” is what happens when somebody spends their whole life trying to become lovable in a world that constantly makes them feel like they are not enough.</p><p>And maybe that is why she became distant. Because every time she loved deeply, she lost pieces of herself trying to be enough for people who were already halfway gone.</p><p>The truth is, she is not angry because she wants attention. She is angry because nobody noticed she was drowning until she learned how to scream.</p><p>And even now, she still apologizes for the noise.</p><p>Because beneath all the expectations, all the pressure, all the heartbreak, all the fear, all the pretending…</p><p>she is still just a girl.</p>
At the end of the month, we give out prizes in 3 categories: Best Content, Top Engagers and
Most Engaged Content.
Best Content
Top Engagers
Most Engaged Content
Best Content
We give out cash prizes to between 7 and 20 community members with the best insights in the past month.
The winners are picked by an in-house selection process.
The winners are NOT picked from the leaderboards/rankings, we choose winners based on the quality, originality
and insightfulness of their content.
Here are a few other things to know for the Best Content track
1
Quality over Quantity — You stand a higher chance of winning by publishing a few really good insights across the entire month,
rather than a lot of low-quality, spammy posts.
2
Share original, authentic, and engaging content that clearly reflects your voice, thoughts, and opinions.
3
Avoid using AI to generate content—use it instead to correct grammar, improve flow, enhance structure, and boost clarity.
4
Explore audio content—high-quality audio insights can significantly boost your chances of standing out.
5
Use eye-catching cover images—if your content doesn't attract attention, it's less likely to be read or engaged with.
6
Share your content in your social circles to build engagement around it.
Top Engagers
For the Top Engagers Track, we award the top 3 people who engage the most with other user's content via
comments.
The winners are picked using the "Top Monthly Engagers" tab on the rankings page.
Most Engaged Content
The Most Engaged Content recognizes users whose content received the most engagement during the month.
We pick the top 3.
The winners are picked using the "Top Monthly Contributors" tab on the rankings page.
Contributor Rankings
The Rankings/Leaderboard shows the Top 20 contributors and engagers on TwoCents a monthly and all-time basis
— as well as the most active colleges (users attending/that attended those colleges)
The all-time contributors ranking is based on the Contributor Score, which is a measure of all the engagement and exposure a contributor's content receives.
The monthly contributors ranking tracks performance of a user's insights for the current month. The monthly and all-time scores are calcuated DIFFERENTLY.
This page also shows the top engagers on an all-time & monthly basis.
All-time Contributors
All-time Engagers
Top Monthly Contributors
Top Monthly Engagers
Most Active Colleges
Contributor Score
The all-time ranking is based on users' Contributor Score, which is a measure of all
the engagement and exposure a contributor's content receives.
Here is a list of metrics that are used to calcuate your contributor score, arranged from
the metric with the highest weighting, to the one with the lowest weighting.
1
Subscriptions received
2
Tips received
3
Comments (excluding replies)
4
Upvotes
5
Views
6
Number of insights published
Engagement Score
The All-time Engagers ranking is based on a user's Engagement Score — a measure of how much a
user engages with other users' content via comments and upvotes.
Here is a list of metrics that are used to calcuate the Engagement Score, arranged from
the metric with the highest weighting, to the one with the lowest weighting.
1
A user's comments (excluding replies & said user's comments on their own content)
2
A user's upvotes
Monthly Score
The Top Monthly Contributors ranking is a monthly metric indicating how users respond to your posts, not just how many you publish.
We look at three main things:
1
How strong your best post is —
Your highest-scoring post this month carries the most weight. One great post can take you far.
2
How consistent the engagement you receive is —
We also look at the average score of all your posts. If your work keeps getting good reactions, you get a boost.
3
How consistent the engagement you receive is —
Posting more helps — but only a little.
Extra posts give a small bonus that grows slowly, so quality always matters more than quantity.
In simple terms:
A great post beats many ignored posts
Consistently engaging posts beat one lucky hit
Spamming low-engagement posts won't help
Tips, comments, and upvotes from others matter most
This ranking is designed to reward
Thoughtful, high-quality posts
Real engagement from the community
Consistency over time — without punishing you for posting again
The Top Monthly Contributors leaderboard reflects what truly resonates, not just who posts the most.
Top Monthly Engagers
The Top Monthly Engagers ranking tracks the most active engagers on a monthly basis
Here is what we look at
1
A user's monthly comments (excluding replies & said user's comments on their own content)
2
A user's monthly upvotes
Most Active Colleges
The Most Active Colleges ranking is a list of the most active contributors on TwoCents, grouped by the
colleges/universities they attend(ed)
Here is what we look at
1
All insights posted by contributors that attended a particular school (at both undergraduate or postgraduate levels)
2
All comments posted by contributors that attended a particular school (at both undergraduate or postgraduate levels) —
excluding replies
Below is a list of badges on TwoCents and their designations.
Comments