Monday, March 30, 2026

Cosa mi ha insegnato viaggiare per il mondo da giornalista africano

 

Come domestico a Sacrofano, pulivo la piscina del mio datore di lavoro e portavo fuori i cani ogni sera.

Come domestico a Sacrofano, pulivo la piscina del mio datore di lavoro e portavo fuori i cani ogni sera.

 

Viaggiare nel mondo come giornalista africano non è stato soltanto un percorso professionale, ma una trasformazione profonda. Ogni paese visitato, ogni volto incontrato e ogni confine attraversato ha modellato il mio modo di osservare l’umanità.

 

Ma prima ancora dei miei viaggi internazionali, è stata l’Italia, e soprattutto Roma, a insegnarmi alcune delle lezioni più importanti della mia vita. Quando arrivai a Roma, non avevo una casa né un punto di riferimento.

 

Per molti giorni dormii alla Stazione Termini, insieme a tanti altri stranieri che cercavano di sopravvivere e di costruire un futuro. Quelle notti fredde, illuminate dalle luci della stazione, mi hanno insegnato la prima grande lezione: la resilienza nasce quando non hai altra scelta che andare avanti.

 

Molti di noi, privi di lavoro e di un posto dove dormire, finirono per rifugiarsi in un vecchio pastificio abbandonato: la famosa Pantanella. Anch’io vissi lì, tra centinaia di immigrati provenienti da ogni parte del mondo.

 

In quel luogo, tra materassi improvvisati, lingue diverse e speranze fragili, capii che la dignità umana non dipende dalle circostanze, ma dalla forza interiore che ognuno porta con sé.

 

Fu proprio in quel periodo difficile che decisi di iscrivermi alla scuola della Caritas di Roma. In sei mesi imparai a parlare e scrivere l’italiano con fluidità. La lingua divenne la mia porta d’accesso alla società, il ponte che mi permise di trasformare la sopravvivenza in possibilità.

 

Poco dopo, trovai il mio primo lavoro in Italia. Diventai “house taker- un domestico” in una splendida casa a Sacrofano, un tranquillo e bellissimo paese alle porte di Roma. Pulivo la casa, curavo la piscina e mi occupavo dei due cani pastore tedesco del mio datore di lavoro.

 

Lavoravo per un giornalista italiano, Claudio Lavazza (Tg2), un uomo gentile e rispettoso che mi trattò con dignità. Fu proprio grazie a lui che ebbi l’occasione di conoscere un altro grande giornalista italiano, Michele Cucuzza.

 

Anche lui, come Claudio, si dimostrò un vero gentiluomo. Quelle relazioni umane, nate in un momento fragile della mia vita, mi hanno insegnato che la bontà non ha nazionalità. Quell’esperienza romana mi ha insegnato che il viaggio non inizia quando sali su un aereo, ma quando affronti la vita con coraggio. E da lì, il mondo ha continuato a parlarmi.

 

Viaggiando ho imparato che la resilienza non appartiene a un solo continente. L’ho vista nei mercati dell’Asia, nei villaggi dell’Europa dell’Est, nei quartieri popolari dell’America Latina. Ovunque, gli esseri umani lottano, cadono, si rialzano e continuano a credere in un domani migliore.

 

Ho imparato anche il valore dell’ascolto. Le storie più autentiche non arrivano dai palazzi del potere, ma dalle strade, dalle famiglie, dai lavoratori, dagli anziani che custodiscono memorie preziose. Ogni cultura ha un ritmo, un modo di raccontarsi, un silenzio che parla.

 

Viaggiare mi ha insegnato a rispettare questi ritmi e a non imporre mai la mia voce sopra quella degli altri. La diversità è stata un’altra grande maestra. Il mondo è un mosaico di culture, lingue e tradizioni. Viaggiare mi ha insegnato che la diversità non divide: illumina.

 

Ti costringe a guardare oltre i tuoi limiti, a mettere in discussione le tue certezze, a crescere come essere umano. Ora sono sposato da 32 anni e, insieme a mia moglie e ai nostri tre figli, viviamo ad Anversa, in Belgio.

 

Oggi, dopo anni di spostamenti, reportage e incontri, so che viaggiare non è mai un atto neutrale. È un privilegio, una responsabilità e un dono. E come giornalista africano, continuo a credere che il mondo abbia bisogno di più ascolto, più empatia e più storie che uniscano invece di dividere. Perché alla fine, ovunque andiamo, scopriamo che l’umanità è una sola.


The Global Sleep Crisis

 

An illustration of a woman struggling to sleep in a bedroom glowing with a deep blue night light.

An illustration of a woman struggling to sleep in a bedroom glowing with a deep blue night light.


Sleep, a basic human need that comes naturally to people of all ages, has quietly transformed into a rare luxury in the modern world. Across continents, millions go to bed tired but wake up exhausted, trapped in a cycle of restlessness that affects their mental health, physical wellbeing, productivity, and relationships.

 

The pace of life has become so fast, so noisy, and so demanding that rest is no longer guaranteed. It is something people must fight for, protect, and sometimes even schedule like an appointment. Technology plays a major role in this crisis. Smartphones, social media, and constant notifications keep the brain alert long after the day should be over.

 

Blue light from screens suppresses melatonin, the hormone that signals the body to sleep, tricking the mind into believing it is still daytime. Many people scroll at night to relax, but instead, they overstimulate their minds, creating a generation that sleeps late, wakes up early, and lives in a permanent state of fatigue.

 

Work culture has also changed dramatically. Modern society glorifies productivity over wellbeing, pushing people to work late, answer emails in bed, and carry stress home like a second skin. The pressure to achieve more, earn more, and stay competitive has created a world where rest feels like a weakness.

 

Sleep is sacrificed for deadlines, and rest is postponed for ambition, leading to burnout that affects both individuals and entire communities. Even when the environment is quiet, many people cannot sleep because their minds are too loud.

 

Anxiety, financial pressure, family responsibilities, and global uncertainty keep thoughts racing long after the body is ready to rest. The bed becomes a battlefield where worries grow louder, and sleep slips further away.

 

Lifestyle changes have also disrupted natural sleep rhythms. People stay awake longer, eat late, socialize late, and rely on caffeine or alcohol to cope with stress. These habits interfere with the body’s internal clock, making it harder to enter deep, restorative sleep. 


Related post: The future of travel: Why people are returning to nature destinations

 

The human body was designed for rhythm, but modern life has replaced rhythm with chaos. Environmental factors add to another layer of difficulty. Traffic noise, bright city lights, crowded living spaces, and 24hour entertainment create a world where the night is no longer peaceful.

 

Even those who move from noisy cities to quieter places often discover that internal stress follows them, proving that silence alone cannot heal a restless mind.

 

The consequences of sleep deprivation are severe. A tired world is a sick world. Lack of sleep weakens immunity, increases the risk of depression and anxiety, contributes to heart disease, affects memory, leads to weight gain, reduces creativity, and impairs decisionmaking.

 

A society that does not sleep becomes less productive, less compassionate, and more vulnerable to illness. This is why the sleep crisis is not just a personal issue but a global one. Sleep should not be a privilege reserved for the few who manage to escape stress, noise, or digital overload.

 

It should be a natural part of life, accessible to everyone. Yet the modern world has made rest fragile and easily stolen.

 

Recommended Measures to Improve Sleep and Reduce the Crisis

 

• Limit screen time at least one hour before bed to reduce bluelight exposure.

• Create a consistent sleep schedule, even on weekends.

• Reduce caffeine and alcohol intake, especially in the evening.

• Practice relaxation techniques such as deep breathing, meditation, or reading.

• Keep the bedroom dark, cool, and quiet to support natural sleep rhythms.

• Set boundaries with work, avoiding latenight emails or tasks.

•             Engage in daily physical activity, which improves sleep quality.

•             Disconnect from digital noise, allowing the mind to slow down.

• Seek professional help if insomnia becomes chronic.

 

Sleep is not a luxury; it is a lifeline. Protecting it is one of the greatest acts of selfcare in the modern world.

 

Sunday, March 29, 2026

The quiet power of a Sunday morning

 

A beautiful scene of a calm Sunday morning with soft light, quiet streets, and a peaceful reflective mood.

A beautiful scene of a calm Sunday morning with soft light, quiet streets, and a peaceful reflective mood.


There is something almost sacred about Sunday morning. The world seems to move slowly, as if time itself has decided to take a breath. The usual rush of traffic softens, the phones ring less, and even the sky appears calmer.


In this gentle silence, you can finally hear your own thoughts again, not the hurried ones that push you through the week but the deeper ones that ask you who you are, where you are going, and what truly matters.

 

On a cool Sunday morning, even the air feels different. It carries a softness that invites reflection instead of reaction. You notice details that usually disappear in the noise of daily life: the way light rests quietly on the window, the distant sound of a church bell, the rhythm of footsteps on an almost-empty street.

 

These are not small things; they are reminders that life is not only made of big events and loud moments but also of quiet scenes that pass without applause yet shape our inner world. In a world that constantly demands speed, Sunday morning offers a rare gift, permission to slow down without feeling guilty.

 

The calendar may still be full, and responsibilities may still exist, but for a few hours, the pressure eases. You are allowed to sit with a cup of coffee and do nothing more than think, remember, or simply exist.

 

It is in these pauses that strength is restored, creativity returns, and clarity begins to form. Sometimes the most powerful decision you can make is to stop moving and let the morning speak to you.

 

The forgotten value of slowness

 

We live in a time where productivity is worshipped. If you are not busy, you are made to feel unimportant. If you are not posting, answering, reacting, or producing, the world suggests you are falling behind. Yet, the human mind was not designed to run at full speed every hour of every day. Even machines overheat when they are pushed too hard without rest.

 

Sunday morning quietly challenges this culture of constant urgency. It whispers a different truth: that slowness is not weakness, and rest is not laziness. Slowness allows you to see what speed you missed.

 

When you slow down, you notice the emotions you have been ignoring, the fatigue you have been denying, and the dreams you have been postponing. You realize that you are not a machine; you are a human being with limits, needs, and a soul that also requires care.

 

The quiet of Sunday morning is not empty; it is full. Full of thoughts that finally have space to surface. Full of feelings that finally have room to breathe. Full of ideas that were waiting patiently behind the noise of the week. When you give yourself the gift of slowness, you are not wasting time; you are investing in the quality of the time that will follow.

 

A mirror for the week behind, and the week ahead

 

Sunday morning is also a mirror. It reflects the week you have just lived and the week you are about to enter. In the calm, you can look back without rushing and ask yourself honest questions:

 

• What drained me this week?

• What gave me energy?

•             What did I do just to survive, and what did I do that truly mattered?

 

These questions are not meant to judge you but to guide you. Without reflection, every week looks the same: busy, noisy, and quickly forgotten. With reflection, even a difficult week becomes a teacher. You begin to see patterns, habits that hurt you, choices that helped you, people who lift you, and situations that slowly break you down.

 

Then, gently, Sunday morning turns your eyes forward. It invites you to shape the coming days with more intention. You may not be able to control everything that will happen.

 

However, you can decide how you want to enter the new week: calmer, clearer, and more conscious. You can choose one thing to do differently, one boundary to protect, one small act of kindness to offer, one dream to move a little closer to.

 

The quiet conversation with yourself

 

Most of the week, you are in conversation with the world. You answer emails, respond to messages, listen to news, and react to demands. Sunday morning gives you a chance to have a conversation with yourself. It is time to ask:

 

• Am I living the life I want, or just the life that is expected of me?

• Am I still connected to my values, or have I been carried away by pressure and noise?

• What kind of person do I want to be in the week ahead?

 

These are not questions you can answer while rushing to catch a train or scrolling through notifications. They require silence, honesty, and a bit of courage. The quiet of Sunday morning creates the space for that courage to appear.

 

It allows you to admit your fears without shame, to acknowledge your hopes without embarrassment, and to remember that you are allowed to start again, every week, if necessary.

 

Sometimes, the most important thing you can do on a Sunday morning is to forgive yourself. Forgive yourself for the mistakes of the week, for the words you wish you had not said, for the things you wanted to do but did not. Forgiveness is also a form of rest. It releases the weight you were never meant to carry into another week.

 

A sanctuary in a restless world

 

Not everyone has the same Sunday; for some, it is a workday. For others, it is filled with family duties, noise, or obligations, but even then, there is usually a small window, a moment early in the morning, or a quiet pause in the afternoon, where the world is just a little softer. That small window can become your sanctuary if you choose to protect it.

 

You do not need a perfect environment to experience the quiet power of Sunday. You do not need a big house, a beautiful view, or complete silence. Sometimes, all you need is a chair by the window, a notebook, a cup of tea, or simply your own thoughts. What makes the moment powerful is not the setting, but the intention: the decision to be present, to be still, and to listen.

 

In that sanctuary, you can reconnect with what you love. You can read a few pages of a book that nourishes you. You can write down a memory you don’t want to lose. You can send a message of encouragement to someone who might need it.

 

You can simply sit and watch the light change. These small acts may seem ordinary, but they are the threads that quietly hold your life together.

 

The strength hidden in gentleness

 

The quiet power of a Sunday morning is not loud, dramatic, or spectacular. It does not shout, it does not demand attention, and it does not appear on the news. Yet, it has a strength that many underestimate. From this gentle space, you can gather the emotional and mental energy you need to face another week of noise, demands, and uncertainty.

 

Gentleness is often mistaken for weakness, but it takes great strength to remain gentle in a hard world. It takes strength to pause when everything tells you to hurry. It takes strength to rest when the world glorifies exhaustion. It takes strength to choose peace when anger feels easier. Sunday morning is a quiet training ground for that kind of strength.

 

When you step into the new week after honoring the calm of Sunday, you carry something invisible with you: a steadiness that others may not understand but will feel. You respond instead of react. You think before you speak. You remember what matters when distractions try to pull you away. You are not perfect, but you are more anchored.

 

A simple invitation

 

Perhaps that is the true magic of a Sunday morning: it doesn’t ask you anything. It does not require performance, success, or perfection. It simply offers, coolly, calmly, and unhurriedly, an open door at the edge of a busy road. You can walk past it, or you can step inside for a while.

 

Today, if you find yourself in that quiet space between obligations, let the morning do its work. Sit with your thoughts. Breathe a little deeper. Look back with honesty and forward with hope. Let the silence remind you that you are more than your schedule, more than your worries, more than your productivity.

 

The world will start rushing again soon enough, but for now, there is a quiet power this Sunday morning, soft, steady, and waiting for you to notice it.