I read on Daily News Hungary that Hungary is deepening ties with Russia through discussions on a new Eurasian security framework and honoring Klaus Mangold, a German businessman with strong Russian connections. Meanwhile, the Paks Nuclear Plant expansion faces cost overruns and delays, reflecting Hungary’s controversial foreign policy balancing between NATO and Russia. In my […]
Category: blog
Today was the day of the embryo implantation. My wife got to see the embryo under the microscope before they placed it in her uterus. It was such a small moment, but it felt incredibly important. Isn’t it strange how some of the biggest hopes begin invisibly? There were no fireworks, no loud announcements. Just […]
There’s no shortage of people saying exercise is good for you, and most of the time it sounds like background noise – another item on the long list of things we should be doing but somehow never quite feel like doing. The truth is, physical fitness is advantageous in ways that go far beyond the […]
Of course, just general things. Probably I would tell them that I have a wife and we live in a flat. I like reading and studying in my leisure time. I do not have many friends but I am fine with that. I am currently studying English and History – my job is actually an […]
Today I give you an insight into the branches of Reformation to those who like history. The Reformation splintered into various factions. Luther, influenced by German princes, saw secularizing church lands as a path to independence from the pope and emperor. While reforms favored the urban bourgeoisie, the abolition of usury hurt them. The Anabaptists, […]
I’ve been deep in history mode this week—evaluating my 5th graders on their knowledge of Mesopotamia, Egypt, and the early civilizations. These kids are around 12 years old, so the biggest challenge isn’t whether they can memorize that the Nile flooded annually. It’s whether they can remember anything at all in a way that sticks—and […]
Today I had one of those small, quiet teacher victories that nobody else would notice—but I’ll remember it all week. I was introducing the concept of ancient Mesopotamian religion to my 13-year-olds, and I could see their eyes glaze over within five minutes. “Polytheistic,” “ziggurats,” “anthropomorphic gods”—it was textbook soup, and I was losing them. […]