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March recap (lowkey one of my favorite months)
It honestly felt like a little break from the semester, and I needed that.
❤️got into cinema (finally ) watched a few African films + a lot more I can’t even count at this point.
❤️Started actually building my project, just doing one thing each day. Nothing crazy, but consistent.
❤️Read like 2–4 books, and still in the middle of one.
❤️Finished Game of Thrones… amazing overall, but yeah season 8 kinda hurt 💀
🤍Also randomly went full discipline mode cut off coffee AND basically all caffeine (even soda, candy, energy drinks).
Started going to the gym… it’s nice, I guess, we’ll see how long I keep that up 😭
Not gonna lie though, it wasn’t all perfect.
Felt a bit lonely at times, and had those usual “disappointed in myself” moments.
Also been stressed and overthinking a lot of things.
But yeah… still a good month.
Oh and I’ve been reading a lot of articles about AI, MVPs, and stuff like that too.
And Got married 🙂↕️
April… let’s see what you got.
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ngl I’m a BIG Interstellar fan… like really big (u all know that )
but the more I watch 2001: A Space Odyssey, the cooler it gets
the visuals?? the cinematography??
it literally feels like you’re in space
Interstellar hits your heart
but this one hits your mind fr
Some movies show you space.
This one makes you feel it.
Like you’re just there… floating.
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was sitting with a question today I’ve taken 8 math courses in college(like almost if not more )and my friends constantly argue about whether any of it was actually useful. Honestly? I didn’t have a clear answer either. Then I remembered this quote
Pure mathematics is, in its way, the poetry of logical ideas.Einstein In Ethiopia’s startup scene, math rarely gets a job title. But it shows up everywhere quietly, invisibly, decisively. 🔼The ride-hailing app that figures out which drivers are about to quit before they do? Survival analysis. 🔼The e-commerce platform that knows what a customer will buy next? Collaborative filtering. 🔼The fintech deciding who gets a loan without a credit score? Logistic regression on alternative data. None of those companies called it math. They called it product. The catch is you can’t just be a mathematician here. ➡️You have to sell your math through impact, not equations. Don’t say “I do predictive modeling.” Say “I can tell you which users will churn next week and why.” The ecosystem is early. Most startups are still surviving, not yet optimizing. That’s not a wall it’s a window. Because when the market matures and margins tighten, the person who can build and think mathematically becomes the most dangerous person in the room. Your math isn’t useless. It’s just early ❤️ (Soooo this is my note or coping mechanism lol ) Hire me 😀
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"Why are we afraid of the first time? Every day in life is a first time. Every morning is new. We never live the same day twice. We're never afraid of getting up every morning. Why?" -Ota,
That’s all …good night 🌙
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I remember reading Fikir Eske Mekabir back in Grade 11. At the time, I was mainly drawn to the emotional side of it, especially moments like “mar esketuaf,” but I don’t think I fully understood what the novel was really saying(not really)
Now I’m reading another book (I won’t mention it yet), and it’s making me reflect on Fikir Eske Mekabir in a completely different way.
I’ve come to realize that the novel isn’t just a love story(I did get it at the time but not that deep uk ). It reflects the political and social realities of Ethiopia during the time of Haile Selassie. The relationship between Seble and Bezabih carries emotional weight, but it’s also shaped by power, class, and the system people were living under.
It made me understand (the book ) how writers like Haddis Alemayehu and Abbé Gubegna (alwledem) used literature to expose exploitation, inequality, and the backwardness that existed in parts of society.
And it’s not just in literature. Musicians like Mohammed Ahmed, Tilahun Gessesse, and Bizunesh Bekele expressed similar realities through their music. That emotional depth sometimes sadness comes from reflecting real struggles in society, including cultural shifts, inequality, and the loss of certain values.
So now, looking back, Fikir Eske Mekabir feels like more than just a tragic love story. It feels like a reflection of a society its structure, its struggles, and the people trying to live within it.
It’s interesting how a book can make more sense later not because it changed, but because your perspective did
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I remember reading Fikir Eske Mekabir back in Grade 11. At the time, I was mainly drawn to the emotional side of it, especially moments like “mar esketuaf,” but I don’t think I fully understood what the novel was really saying(not really)
Now I’m reading another book (I won’t mention it yet), and it’s making me reflect on Fikir Eske Mekabir in a completely different way.
I’ve come to realize that the novel isn’t just a love story(I did get it at the time but not that deep uk ). It reflects the political and social realities of Ethiopia during the time of Haile Selassie. The relationship between Seble and Bezabih carries emotional weight, but it’s also shaped by power, class, and the system people were living under.
It made me understand (the book ) how writers like Haddis Alemayehu and Abbé Gubegna (alwledem) used literature to expose exploitation, inequality, and the backwardness that existed in parts of society.
And it’s not just in literature. Musicians like Mohammed Ahmed, Tilahun Gessesse, and Bizunesh Bekele expressed similar realities through their music. That emotional depth sometimes sadness comes from reflecting real struggles in society, including cultural shifts, inequality, and the loss of certain values.
So now, looking back, Fikir Eske Mekabir feels like more than just a tragic love story. It feels like a reflection of a society its structure, its struggles, and the people trying to live within it.
It’s interesting how a book can make more sense later not because it changed, but because your perspective did
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