Dear all
 i read over  I have heard of kafka half german. Franz Kafka.  The story is
not written anywhere as authentic. but beyond all these he is not so famous
as a writer but only as a database storage company holder whose rights even
today Netflix is following.
Private life
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Felice_Bauer_and_Franz_Kafka.jpg>ka

Kafka never married. According to Brod, Kafka was "tortured" by sexual
desire, and Kafka's biographer Reiner Stach
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reiner_Stach> states that his life was full
of "incessant womanising" and that he was filled with a fear of "sexual
failure". Kafka visited brothels for most of his adult life and was
interested in pornography.[61]
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franz_Kafka#cite_note-FOOTNOTEHawes2008186-63>
In
addition, he had close relationships with several women during his
lifetime. On 13 August 1912, Kafka met Felice Bauer
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Felice_Bauer>, a relative of Brod's, who
worked in Berlin as a representative of a dictaphone
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dictaphone> company. A week after the
meeting at Brod's home, Kafka wrote in his diary:

Miss FB. When I arrived at Brod's on 13 August, she was sitting at the
table. I was not at all curious about who she was, but rather took her for
granted at once. Bony, empty face that wore its emptiness openly. Bare
throat. A blouse thrown on. Looked very domestic in her dress although, as
it turned out, she by no means was. (I alienate myself from her a little by
inspecting her so closely ...) Almost broken nose. Blonde, somewhat
straight, unattractive hair, strong chin. As I was taking my seat I looked
at her closely for the first time, by the time I was seated I already had
an unshakeable opinion.[66]
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franz_Kafka#cite_note-FOOTNOTEBanville2011-68>
[67]
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franz_Kafka#cite_note-FOOTNOTEK%C3%B6hler2012-69>

Shortly after this meeting, Kafka wrote the story "Das Urteil
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Judgment>" ("The Judgment") in only one
night and in a productive period worked on *Der Verschollene
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amerika_(novel)>* (*The Man Who Disappeared*)
and *Die Verwandlung* <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Metamorphosis> (*The
Metamorphosis*). Kafka and Felice Bauer communicated mostly through letters
over the next five years, met occasionally, and were engaged twice Kafka's
extant letters to Bauer were published as *Briefe an Felice
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letters_to_Felice>* (*Letters to Felice*);
her letters do not survive. After he had written to Bauer's father asking
to marry her, Kafka wrote in his diary:

My job is unbearable to me because it conflicts with my only desire and my
only calling, which is literature.... I am nothing but literature and can
and want to be nothing else.... Nervous states of the worst sort control me
without pause.... A marriage could not change me, just as my job cannot
change me.

According to the biographers Stach and James Hawes
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Hawes_(author)>, Kafka became engaged
a third time around 1920, to Julie Wohryzek, a poor and uneducated hotel
chambermaid. Kafka's father objected to Julie because of her Zionist
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zionism> beliefs. Although Kafka and Julie
rented a flat and set a wedding date, the marriage never took place. During
this time, Kafka began a draft of *Letter to His Father
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letter_to_His_Father>*. Before the date of
the intended marriage, he took up with yet another woman. While he needed
women and sex in his life, he had low self-confidence, felt sex was dirty,
and was cripplingly shy—especially about his body.

Stach and Brod state that during the time that Kafka knew Felice Bauer, he
had an affair with a friend of hers, Margarethe "Grete" Bloch a Jewish
woman from Berlin. Brod says that Bloch gave birth to Kafka's son, although
Kafka never knew about the child. The boy, whose name is not known, was
born in 1914 or 1915 and died in Munich in 1921 However, Kafka's biographer
Peter-André Alt says that, while Bloch had a son, Kafka was not the father,
as the pair were never intimate. Stach points out that there is a great
deal of contradictory evidence around the claim that Kafka was the father

Kafka was diagnosed with tuberculosis in August 1917 and moved for a few
months to the Bohemian <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bohemia> village of
Zürau (Siřem in Czech), where his sister Ottla worked on the farm of her
brother-in-law Karl Hermann. He felt comfortable there and later described
this time as perhaps the best period of his life, probably because he had
no responsibilities. He kept diaries and *Oktavhefte* (octavo
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Octavo>).

            The Netflix Studio Productions and Finance Team embraces
distributed governance as the way of architecting systems. We use Kafka as
our platform of choice for working with events, which are an immutable way
to record and derive system state.

      Moral code said: Love always hate none; for that right from Janaka to
Buddha so many stories are here.

KR  IRS   1224

On Thu, 1 Feb 2024 at 03:49, 'N Sekar' via iyer123 <[email protected]>
wrote:

> When he was 40, the renowned Bohemian novelist and short story writer
> Franz Kafka (1883–1924), who never married and had no children, was
> strolling through Steglitz Park in Berlin, when he chanced upon a young
> girl crying her eyes out because she had lost her favorite doll. She and
> Kafka looked for the doll without success. Kafka told her to meet him there
> the next day and they would look again.
>
> The next day, when they still had not found the doll, Kafka gave the girl
> a letter "written" by the doll that said, “Please do not cry. I have gone
> on a trip to see the world. I'm going to write to you about my adventures."
>
> Thus began a story that continued to the end of Kafka’s life.
>
> When they would meet, Kafka read aloud his carefully composed letters of
> adventures and conversations about the beloved doll, which the girl found
> enchanting. Finally, Kafka read her a letter of the story that brought the
> doll back to Berlin, and he then gave her a doll he had purchased. “This
> does not look at all like my doll," she said. Kafka handed her another
> letter that explained, “My trips, they have changed me." The girl hugged
> the new doll and took it home with her.
> A year later, Kafka died.
>
> Many years later, the now grown-up girl found a letter tucked into an
> unnoticed crevice in the doll. The tiny letter, signed by Kafka, said,
> “Everything you love is very likely to be lost, but in the end, love will
> return in a different way."
>
>
> Sent from Yahoo Mail on Android
> <https://mail.onelink.me/107872968?pid=nativeplacement&c=Global_Acquisition_YMktg_315_Internal_EmailSignature&af_sub1=Acquisition&af_sub2=Global_YMktg&af_sub3=&af_sub4=100000604&af_sub5=EmailSignature__Static_>
>
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> .
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