Just about one day

Ah, this September.
It’s unlike any other.
It’s unexpectedly warm.
I remember how in the middle of the month we’d either walk around in rubber boots and under umbrellas or wear down jackets because the northerly wind chilled us to the bone.
This year, summer decided to extend, and September brought warmth and sunshine until the end of the month. You can swim in the pool and sunbathe, which is unusual for our northern climate.
But that’s not always the case.
One bad thing is that plants and trees react to this with stress—they shed their leaves early.
And another problem: small streams have dried up. There were many of them in the Toronto area. But now many have dried up, which is very bad for the microclimate. The soil suffers, the trees suffer. It’s dry.
This kind of weather is observed all over the globe, and it doesn’t bring joy.

I don’t know what will happen next year, but we live in a time of change.
Today I’ll tell you about a day in my life.
Everyone has one. And I’m sharing with you how I spend my weekend.
So, we woke up this morning and decided to drive 20 km from home to have breakfast as a family somewhere on the outskirts of Mississauga.

Why?
I just wanted to sit in a nice cafe or restaurant with the whole family and eat something Middle Eastern while the weather was nice—felyafel, khomos, eggplant, bean salad, kofta, and delicious tea from a teapot, like they serve in Jordanian cafes.
We were just reminiscing about our old life and wanted to relive the flavors of that time.
We had a delicious meal in a small restaurant, sitting on the veranda.

So the day was just beginning.
At midday, we decided to stop by the jazz festival that was taking place in Port Credit.
A very crowded and interesting festival that attracted people from all over Ontario.
We arrived just in time for the musicians’ awards ceremony.
There were several stages, and bands and musicians were playing on each.
Port Credit is a very popular place for strolling in Mississauga.

You can never have too much music. The pleasure it brings is indescribable.
And finally, at the end of the day, a family walk on the lake.
I must say, there are few mosquitoes and midges at this time of year, so it’s pleasant to stroll along the lake.
That’s exactly what we did.
And the photo I’m posting for you is unique.
It’s rare to see Lake Ontario like this—filled with algae and shallow, with less water.

Of course, could it be from the full moon?!
Yes, it’s the full moon that does this.
So, I decided to take a photo of the blood moon that so much has been written about.

She’s beautiful.
But you probably can’t see her very well.
I mean, there are the streetlights and the moon.
I’ll take another photo for you, more detailed.
That will be better.

Well, it seems to have worked.
A short story about a day in my life has worked.

Brain Rot

We have to publish and write a lot about the current situation in the virtual environment. And in response to the publication of Oxford University that the past year is the year of brain rot , I will say that it is terrible.

I remember my youth and the time of raising children, when, in order to calm the child, I gave him a computer instead of a toy. What came of it? Two children became adepts and their lives are connected with computers. And you tell me, what about trade, the service sector. Horrible. Who in 30 years will serve us, cook food and clean the premises, guard and bring letters? Of course, I am positive, but if you look seriously, then the capture of artificial intelligence of all industries has already confronted me with a problem this year. With scammers and people who hide behind new technologies. When they took double the price from my credit card when paying for an airplane ticket and when I began to find out the state of affairs, they turned on artificial intelligence, essentially a bot. When I was indignant, they once condescendingly answered me that they did not even have an official page on the Internet, and then they put it on a bot again. In this way, you can’t get through, not return. In fact, it’s good that they didn’t cheat with the credit card. And this is the carrier. That is, the system is controlled selectively and is replaced by bots in case of fraud. Great. We’ve lived to see it. With children – their depression and lack of desire to learn and achieve something.

Have you noticed that the protest system today is urinating on fences in the centers of large cities, garbage and a bunch of cans and dirt in parks, on the roads, in cultural places.
How to resist – I support those who say that it is necessary to turn off excessive use of the Internet. Create according to interests. And control the flow of information.
Well, as an example from me – I created a book. I neglected the Internet community and discovered for myself in this leap year books, the book community, the rustle of pages and live debates in library clubs. And this is wonderful. Two years ago I discovered a Japanese cultural center, which I simply adore for everything it does and represents. Well, and I, as someone who does not understand, wanted to learn the language. But where is there, because this is a completely new world in which I am absolutely blind without an assistant.

The events that take place in this center in Toronto are my assistant and guide. Whenever I have time, I visit it with pleasure.

I enjoy communicating with readers, hearing their wishes and preparing the next publications. I am already preparing a new edition for next year. It will be a bilingual edition, which will create a wider audience and help readers get to know my publications better.
Today I will tell you a little about my book, which was published this year.
It is dedicated to children who dream of the sea and travel. It also tells about the Ukrainian navy. The book contains short interesting stories about the largest sailing warships, their achievements, major battles, glory and defeats. There is a section dedicated to the fleet of the first Ukrainian republic.
It separately tells about the first years of the formation of Ukraine’s independence in 1992. Interesting, exciting, educational, informative.

Many public meetings with readers have already been held and I am pleased that the reading audience is very wide – from small children to older people who, rereading the book, supplement it with their own stories and memories.

Literally tomorrow there will be another meeting with children and their parents. On St. Nicholas Day I will represent the side of wizards, storytellers, give gifts, miracles and a pleasant mood. Well, I invite you, my readers, to this fascinating world and we will meet tomorrow at 4 pm 3015 Winston Churchill Blv.,Mississauga,On

@KNYGA.ca