The first spark? When I found out that in Polish, the word “no” actually means “yes”. That’s when I realised languages can flip your brain upside down and still make perfect sense.
The real “wow” moment came years later, while scuba diving in the Red Sea. Down there, surrounded by coral gardens and colourful fish, I discovered a whole new language: the silent codes of divers. A thumbs-up no longer meant “like” but “let’s go up”. A thumbs-down? Not dislike – it meant “let’s dive deeper”.
That’s when it clicked: watching a film or a YouTube walking tour feels just the same. You’re not just watching – you’re immersed. You become the one walking, exploring, living that moment, all without leaving your sofa.
I had my own ritual too: giant Sony monitor, headphones tight, lights off. Pure immersion – switching off reality and letting the film carry me somewhere else.
And that’s how Blomblaum was born: a language for everyone who travels with their mind and screen. In this language, blom means “I like it” and blaum means “I don’t like it”. A simple code, like a thumbs-up or thumbs-down – sofa edition. But deeper than that, Blomblaum is about finding the magic of walking the world in 4K, step by step, even if your feet never leave the ground.