Cold and rainy today, cheers from Sofia. We celebrate the end of a long dry period, I hope the dams get a bit of a refill.





Cats, good books, AI, and religious walking in the city of Sofia
Cold and rainy today, cheers from Sofia. We celebrate the end of a long dry period, I hope the dams get a bit of a refill.





Last month I read less than the recent months. Maybe I just didn’t click with the books I picked up, or maybe life was too busy. Either way, my stack was smaller, but there were still some highlights.
The Obelisk Gate by N.K. Jemisin – The second book in The Broken Earth trilogy was great. In this world, the Evil Earth is a living, hostile creature. People with magical power can bend volcanos and seismic forces to their will. It’s apocalyptic, imaginative, and also a slow read. This was my only ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ book for me this month.
Right now I’m juggling three books at once, giving each so little attention that I’m wondering if October will turn out any better. We’ll see.
For the past two years, I’ve averaged more than 10,000 steps a day.
A colleague recently asked me how I stay motivated to keep up with something like this. The question wasn’t specifically about steps, but since walking is my example, here’s how I approach it. Felt like a good writing prompt.
Getting 10K steps every day isn’t easy. Each morning you start from zero. On good days, it feels like nothing. But on days that are grey, freezing, hot, rainy, when my mood is low or my feet hurt, the empty steps bar on the Health app can look like a vertical wall.
(below, steps over the last 5 days, and the weather outside with a nasty AI-generated gambling ad)


So, the only way I can do things like that, and the steps, is by forming and following a habit. There are days where the cats are friendly, people are smiling, the weather is nice, and I’m looking forward to doing the steps. Other days, the only thing that gets me out the door is the habit.
That habit means I don’t waste mental energy deciding whether I should walk, when to walk, or why to walk. The only challenge left is dealing with the obstacles of the day like weather, fatigue, a lengthy todo, mood, and not the decision itself.
For example, today I’ve done 5,800 steps. It’s already 7 p.m., so I’ll head out one more time to add another 1,500–2,000. It’s not always fun, but I’ve got a waterproof jacket, so I’ll be fine.

Essun is going after her missing daughter Nassun, while the world is slowly ending. Ash and acid are falling from the skies and the wildlife is eating people in unusual ways.
She finds an old friend instead.
Earth is clearly no place for humans in this series and I don’t need the third book to see where it’s all headed. But there’s a tiny bit of hope that this very unstable world can provide home to humans. So I think I’ll continue with it.
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ out of 5. Also, the copy is beautiful.




The last photo was supposed to be beautiful but I somehow did this wrong crop and felt like it’s still worthy because it features love in the bottom right corner.
I think the first cat has been featured here at least two times before and is only overshadowed by a family of black kittens.