For your Saturday reading — I dare not say enjoyment as there are, alas, few joys in the story — a monograph on Serbia covering 14 centuries of dense history in mere 30 pages, written by Lily Lynch, the one American who knows more about the Balkans than the Balkanites themselves.
It is a cool, rainy spring morning in D.C. and Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto in D dur sits just right.
Belatedly reading a wonderful post from David Smith on that strange feeling you get right after completing a big project, not-really-tired and not-really-empty. It was guaranteed for me after every big exam back in medical school, nowadays comes on not more than once per year. I could identify it even back then but didn’t know what to call it, and stretched — thank you, J. R. R. Tolkien for coming up with it — is a good descriptor.
How many more gems are hidden in The Lord of the Rings, I wonder. After 20+ years, it is due for a re-read.
Finished reading: Orthodoxy by G. K. Chesterton 📚
Not much has changed in how people think about religion since Chesterton wrote this more than a century ago. Alas, the way people write about it has gotten much worse.
Apps and/or services I have tried and dropped so far this year:
The one that stuck:
Yet again, Microsoft is eating everyone’s lunch. Back to the 1990s it is.
The 20th day of the 4th month is a special day for everyone, most of all lovers of murder mysteries and fine art. This year, it is also the end of Ramadan.
But was it all worthy of the most expensive fireworks display to date?
He’s a Firefox user.

The finalists of Axios DC’s best building bracket are the Washington National Cathedral and the Eisenhower Executive Office Building. An easy choice!
I first hear about “date me” docs a few months ago, when someone I followed on Twitter shared his. Today, Tyler Cowen wrote a brief note about them and pointed to another one, from a (female) acquaintance of his.
As someone who’s been in a stable relationship for 14 years this month, I count my blessings every day that I don’t have to think about dating, in the US, in the 2010s and now the ’20s. And for the reason why, look no further than the ridiculous dating apps, and now “dating docs”, which remove all exploration, randomness, and surprise — which is to say everything human — out of the process of finding a partner. Serendipity Which was surprise in a prior version of the post but serendipity is a much better word; thank you, dear reader. in particular is underrated by those who think these documents are a good idea, both in finding out you have common interests with someone you were interested in, and in discovering new things that you wouldn’t have considered before.
Don’t get me wrong, it obviously works for someone — probably people who think a trustless financial system is a good idea — but it is clearly not for me. More worryingly, a portion of kids these days seems to enjoy eliminating everything Dr. Who At least every Dr. Who up to and including David Tennant — things started getting depressing during the Capaldi years and I drifted away from watching…liked about humans. Which is an interesting thing to be happening at the same time when algorithms are starting to “hallucinate”, “lie”, and — let’s call it what it is — bullshit, which have for better or worse been typically human traits.
I shall now grab my walker and shuffle off into the sunset.