Juraj Kubelka

Building explainable software and living with curiosity

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01

Motivation

Our daily lives are surrounded by business and health struggles that are difficult to understand and commonly considered normal. I challenge this status quo and empower businesses and individuals. Particularly, (i) I make (legacy) software systems explainable, (ii) and provide health knowledge that brings clarity and solutions.

02

Business

I am part of the feenk team, where we modernize (legacy) software systems, making them explainable. It allows our customers progress fast and gain competitive advantage. We achieve such extraordinary changes employing Moldable Development.

03

Health and Natural Hygiene

Health is one of my enduring interests. I regularly ask and research whether common and difficult health problems are necessary. This long-term research led me to Natural Hygiene, which covers 19 keys to the optimal health, including food, movement, rest, and other conditions that let the body recover and thrive. I approach this space as a learner and as a practitioner, with curiosity and respect for lived experience.

I recommend following and studying the work of Lauren Whiteman Farris and Maria Mazza. Their work is particularly useful for learning and applying Natural Hygiene in daily life.

04

Pets Health and Natural Hygiene

Every animal species needs to follow what their physiology dictates, including dogs and cats. Dogs eat fresh fruits and raw meat, while cats are exclusively carnivorous. Following their appropriate diet makes them thrive and live without diseases.

For more information about how to feed your loving pets, visit Lauren's site therawkey.com. In particular, see the Natural dog diet quickstart guide and the Natural cat diet quickstart guide.

05

Critical Perspectives on Allopathic Medicine

I find it valuable to study critical perspectives on conventional medicine alongside the interest in health and Natural Hygiene. The following books have been especially influential in shaping my personal perspective.

I recommend starting with the booklet Breaking The Spell by Dr. Tom Cowan. Subsequently continue with the book What Really Makes You Ill? by Dawn Lester and David Parker, and/or the book The Final Pandemic by Dr Mark Bailey and Dr Samantha Bailey.

A reliable way to make people believe in falsehoods is frequent repetition. Because familiarity is not easily distinguished from truth.

— Daniel Kahneman

06

Contact

The easiest way to reach me is by email. I do not expose my real email to protect me from spams and frauds. Please, do not be confused by the email alias below.