
Sharing a photo of this liquid boy to brighten your day. I met an exceptionally pretty cat today but she refused to pose. Maybe next time 🙂
Cats, good books, AI, and religious walking in the city of Sofia

Sharing a photo of this liquid boy to brighten your day. I met an exceptionally pretty cat today but she refused to pose. Maybe next time 🙂
I kept an eye on the new writing prompts that we shipped last week. I was curious to see if people like them or not. Also, some of these are just a little bit unorthodox and may not be to the everyone’s liking.
So far:
Best writing prompt:
What’s a thing you were completely obsessed with as a kid?
Worst new writing prompt:
What’s the most interesting local custom you’ve encountered?
And the first unusual one is today’s prompt:
What are the biggest benefits of minimalist living?
I’ll have to post a true answer to this one but so far, the origins of it have only been hinted on my blog. Books create clutter. I have many. They take up living space. It’s kipple. As Philip K. Dick says:
Kipple is useless objects, like junk mail or match folders after you use the last match or gum wrappers or yesterday’s homeopape. When nobody’s around, kipple reproduces itself.
So my wife discovered Marie Kondo and thanks to her book, I was able to get rid of half of my clothes and a sizable portion of the books. But we are losing this battle.
Today’s writing prompt is invited by our family’s battle with books, clothes, fitness devices, and toys nobody plays with. Old Apple devices and their fancy boxes. Chargers. Cables.
An immortal human would not be able to have a good quality blog due to anniversary announcements taking up to 100% of the blogging space. My username here turned 20 🙂

The cyclists of the Giro flew past me today. It was a great experience with tens of thousands of people everywhere.
The leading group:

And the peloton, I think the winner is the guy in violet jersey, 4th from the right.

Steps count reached 26000. First time I reach that number within the city. Wasn’t easy to find a spot on the first line and fulfill my blogging duties 🙂
I visited the place of the final sprint and the 7km mark, both by foot, as the main boulevard is closed. This means I did 19500 steps, and the peloton isn’t even here yet. Little one walked with me to the 7th kilometer and got himself a rubber band ball.






