MY INTERESTS AND PASSIONS
 
 
As far as my memory goes back my very first passion was the perpetual locomotion. I was six or seven years old when I came across the idea in a book of popular physics and was hooked. I began imagining all possible combinations of mechanical or electrical devices known to a six-year-old and after choosing those seemingly most appropriate for eternal energy production presented my inventions to my parents. While my mother did not understand enough mechanics to appreciate my engineering in full, my father was competent and patiently explained to me the flaws of my designs. After about half a year, my father, finely annoyed by my perseverance, took the time to explain to me that the laws of physics excluded the very possibility of a perpetum mobile and that therefore all my proposals were destined to fail. I was too young to understand the scientific proof itself, but believing my father I honored the laws of physics and went on to drawing labyrinths. The latter activity became my second passion and I pursued it with even greater ardour than the first one. Nevertheless I did not completely surrender my disposition for perpetual locomotion and continued to devise mechanisms and check them myself for defects that I now knew they were bound to have.
 
Other big passions of my childhood were  architecture, zoology, geology,  other sciences soccer and Musorgski. 
My teens were characterised by intensive sports, literature, electronics, more inventions and Beatles. In my early twenties I developed interest for human sciences, law, fine arts, physical work, travel and jazz. Economics, politics and more jazz followed in the thirties. Today my greatest interests lay in natural sciences, philosophy and fine arts, but I also appreciate sports, travel,  music,   and some handy work. Periodically some of those activities become passions and I engage with more or less enthusiasm in one of them more systematically.
 
I have a real passion for foreign cultures and rarely travel for pure leisure. My initial  curiosity is usually aroused by  secondary sources like books of movies. When junks of this incidental information become insufficient travel is the best solution. When traveling, I always learn a few expressions  in the native language(s) as well as the alphabet, some history,  customs and absorb as much native spirit as I can. Occasionally I work or do business abroad. Although I have clear preferences for some places or cultures, I have never been to a country that was not worth visiting at all. Many are worth a closer look.  My passion to travel has never waned. Sometimes curiosity pays off.  If it wasn't for traveling I would not live in Montreal in the first place.
 
Here  I spend most of the winter reading scientific and semi-scientific literature on physics and neurology as well as  political press such as " Der Spiegel " or " The Economist " and do (mostly indoor) sports. I also draw, play chess,  visit museums and make excursions to New York City to listen to good jazz. In the summer mostly I travel, go deep-sea diving and sailing.

 
Most of my passions originate in hunger for knowledge. Other stemmed from the impressions I had from performances or skills of other people. All in all I had, have and probably will have very many different interests and passions. Usually after I learn what I was interested to know, acquire a skill that impressed me or get see what intrigued me, my interest abates. However some activities I stick with for a long time. To great amusement of my friends I keep on inventing minor devices like accessories for cars, household and sports. Today still children who want to me to draw a labyrinth usually do not need to ask twice.
 

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