


Cats, good books, AI, and religious walking in the city of Sofia



Is a little chaos actually good for us?
Constant changes are part of life. Changes come with a little bit of chaos.
Not much changes on Mars and Mars isn’t a very habitable place.

I’m reading a second book over 1000 pages this year, called Empire of the Vampire by Jay Kristoff. The book is full of exceptionally powerful vampires that are quickly turning humans extinct.
The main character says that the vampires are people free from consequences. Not facing consequences is what makes them evil, not the vampirism (well, at least for now). It clicked with me because it makes total sense in a world where people compete to be as free from consequences as possible, yet the consequences are everywhere.
I have the feeling this book will get 5*, if I manage to read the whole thing.

Shishman Street is sometimes pedestrian. It is beautiful and I hope it would one day become pedestrian-only, especially given that the main pedestrian area in Sofia is so packed with people that it’s no longer pleasant.


I wish I took more photos. I didn’t suspect anything there is blog-worthy but when scrolling through the camera roll, these two photos surprised me.
I stopped sleeping well in my mid to late 30s. I used alcohol to end the day, coffee to start it, and didn’t sleep much in total. Yet I still woke up at night anyway. The bad sleep eventually contributed to significant health issues.
Here’s what helped me turn things around:
If it’s not worth doing first thing in the morning, it’s not worth doing last thing in the evening
The reason for going to bed late most nights was just doing random things online, like doomscrolling or watching TV shows. Not worth it, according to the rule above.
This resulted in better sleep for me on average, and I think I clock 7+ hours most nights.