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    <title>MyNotes</title>
    <link>https://my-notes.dragas.net/</link>
    <description>These scribbles, my kaleidoscope of thought, shall reveal the way I perceive the world.</description>
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    <lastBuildDate>Thu, 09 Jul 2026 08:00:00 GMT</lastBuildDate>
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      <title>My Fog</title>
      <link>https://my-notes.dragas.net/2026/07/09/my-fog/</link>
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      <description><![CDATA[An old, blurry photo brings back the memory of a walk through the thick fog - a protective blanket where the world fades away, sounds are muffled, and the only certainty left is your own thoughts.]]></description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I was looking for an old photo to show my wife when a peculiar image appeared. Little light, plenty of artefacts from the primitive smartphone camera of sixteen years ago, something extremely blurred within an indistinct dark grey blanket. </p>
<p>I recognised it. I smiled. It was exactly as I had intended it, when I took it. <em>My fog</em>.</p>
<p>I was born in a place where fog was an extremely rare phenomenon, and I have lived for many years now in an area where fog is a constant for much of the year. Or perhaps I should say it was, because in recent years things have changed here too.
The first few times, it frightened me. At the wheel, it worried me. But when I wasn&#39;t driving, I welcomed it with affection, <em>my</em> fog.</p>
<p>That day I was confused. Saddened, unable to truly make sense of things. I decided to go out on foot, well wrapped up, and I ventured out. A few metres from home, I stopped seeing the buildings. The sounds are different too, when I walk through <em>my</em> fog. Muffled and distant, and the pressure of the humidity pushes against the eardrums, almost like a massage. The smell is particular, and it dampens everything else.</p>
<p>You see distant shapes that, as they draw closer, take form. Then they vanish, shortly after, just as they appeared. In silence, in indifference. Because when there is <em>my</em> fog, people are more distant, even if they are a few metres away.</p>
<p>I hear my thoughts, in <em>my</em> fog. Only them. Only mine. Because everything is muffled, even the existence of others. And I don&#39;t get distracted, in <em>my</em> fog, because all around there is only her, massaging my skin and reminding me to think of myself.</p>
<p>It is me, among the shadows, in <em>my</em> fog. There are people, but there is no one.</p>
<p>The only certainty is that I am here.</p>
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      <pubDate>Thu, 09 Jul 2026 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <atom:updated>2026-07-09T08:00:00.000Z</atom:updated>
      <author>stefano@dragas.it (Stefano Marinelli)</author>
      <dc:creator>Stefano Marinelli</dc:creator>
      <category>life</category>
      <category>reflections</category>
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    <item>
      <title>Señor</title>
      <link>https://my-notes.dragas.net/2026/07/02/senor/</link>
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      <description><![CDATA[An unexpected meeting on a hot morning, between a slow backup, an offered coffee, and the contagious serenity of someone who knows how to be grateful for life.]]></description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>My concentration was at its highest, and I could not understand why that backup was so slow. The heat would not let me focus, and I was sweating, and the sweat was distracting me. </p>
<p>All of a sudden, the sound of the intercom. I jumped in my chair. I looked at the clock: 10. Perfectly on time. &quot;Good&quot;. I suspended my task, opened the window and told them to come in, while I put on a pair of shorts and went down to the street.</p>
<p>Two lads got out of the white van. One came towards me smiling, holding out his hand: &quot;Pleased to meet you, soy Federico.&quot; I held out my hand too, and replied with the same smile. Very thin, tanned, tidy and clean. In no time at all, he started unloading his tools and asking me where the entry point into the house was. &quot;We come down from the pole, then we connect to the inspection chamber, and we arrive wherever you want.&quot; I showed him my idea, which I had already prepared with some electrician’s pull wires. &quot;Perfect, <em>Señor</em>, very simple! I only need to dig a small trench, twelve metres along the passage. I’ll get the pickaxe.&quot;</p>
<p>I looked at him. Twelve metres, 35 degrees, pickaxe?
He smiled. &quot;Yes, it takes me longer to get the machine down than to do it by hand. Don’t worry, <em>Señor</em>, I am used to it.&quot;
He started digging and, in fact, in just a few minutes he had made the small trench. I offered him a coffee, which he gladly accepted. Then some water. No, he already had that. While he was drinking the coffee, he thanked me. People do not offer it very often, but he appreciates it.</p>
<p>&quot;I can imagine how tiring it must be to work in this heat, in the street...&quot;
&quot;No, <em>Señor</em>. Yes, it is hot, but it is a pleasure. I like my work. I learn a lot, I meet many people, soy lucky.&quot;</p>
<p>He wanted to talk, to tell me about himself. I decided to stop and stay with him while he worked, and the more I listened, the more he worked with joy. He had left Argentina with his whole family a few years before. He did not speak Italian, but &quot;Italian and Spanish are similar. We understand each other.&quot; But when he started working, he realised he could not understand. &quot;They were not speaking Italian, <em>Señor</em>! Only their local language. But in the end I had learnt something, and they laughed. I spoke badly. But they understood me, eh!&quot; Then he was transferred a thousand kilometres away. &quot;And here they speak Italian, I understand everything! And they understand me! But I had become fond of my old people, even if I did not understand them.&quot;
Federico, meanwhile, kept digging and talking.
&quot;My little girls went to school here. They speak Italian perfectly, and they have many friends! They are fascinated by their origin, and some families hope their children may learn a little Spanish with them.&quot;</p>
<p>His face, more and more sweaty, kept smiling. &quot;How could I complain? I have a good job, my family is well. I want to buy a house, I have some savings, but I need to get a mortgage. Actually, could you give me some advice, <em>Señor</em>?&quot;</p>
<p>I smiled. I explained a few tricks to him, a few things that could make it easier for him. He thanked me in his own way: he did an even more precise job, even cleaner. And he kept smiling, serene. &quot;When I left for Italy with my family, I thought I was mad. Instead, it was the best thing I have ever done. After my little girls, of course!&quot; And he burst out laughing.</p>
<p>At the end of the work, when it was time to say goodbye, I offered him another bottle of water, but he declined. &quot;I have my supply, <em>Señor</em>. Today is hot and I am prepared. Today is a beautiful full day!&quot;
I thanked him with a friendly, familiar handshake. &quot;Thank you for the coffee and the advice, <em>Señor</em>. I appreciate it very, very much!&quot;
He manoeuvred quickly and threw himself back into the street, waving warmly at me with his hand.</p>
<p>I went back to my study. I sat down on my chair and returned to my backup. I smiled. I had put a rate limiter on the IP. Click, removed. The backup started flowing again at its regular speed.</p>
<p>And, all of a sudden, I realised I had stopped sweating.</p>
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      <pubDate>Thu, 02 Jul 2026 18:55:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <atom:updated>2026-07-02T18:55:00.000Z</atom:updated>
      <author>stefano@dragas.it (Stefano Marinelli)</author>
      <dc:creator>Stefano Marinelli</dc:creator>
      <category>life</category>
      <category>people</category>
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    <item>
      <title>The Black Mug</title>
      <link>https://my-notes.dragas.net/2026/06/24/the-black-mug/</link>
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      <description><![CDATA[A black mug, never used in 22 years, outlives the park whose name it still carries. A coincidence, a moment of weightlessness, and the quiet pleasure of feeling lighter.]]></description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Emptying the kitchen cupboard for the electricians&#39; arrival, I found a black mug I had lost track of a long time ago. I smiled. It still looks brand new, even though it&#39;s 22 years old. Never used, always carefully kept, it has preserved its lettering in perfect &quot;Movieland&quot; style, a name that no longer exists today. Not the only one.</p>
<p>The park had opened a year earlier, and the visit was a coincidence: we drove past, noticed it, and it sparked our curiosity. It was small back then, but full of energy. Lara Croft, the Blues Brothers - I have photos with all of them - and the Back to the Future DeLorean. There were wonderful shows and distinctive attractions. The owners wandering around the park, studying their guests&#39; expressions, and a general sense of novelty and growth. It was the high point of those days, and it gave me a sense of peace for a long time to come.</p>
<p>Two years ago, waking up in a hotel, we didn&#39;t know what to do. An advert in a leaflet and the idea struck: we could go to Movieland! Tickets bought online, into the car, and within minutes we were at the car park.</p>
<p>I remembered the entrance being different, and in general, the sense of familiarity was only present in specific areas. But the atmosphere was the same, the energy too, and the positivity at its highest. </p>
<p>At one point, we decided to try an attraction called <em>Antares</em>, without knowing what it was. A beautiful set design, an interesting story, and then into the spacecraft. The rotor principle, dated by now, but perfectly synchronised with music, video, and lights. Until our feet lifted off the ground, simulating weightlessness.</p>
<p>I closed my eyes and smiled. I could no longer feel my body, only a soul lifting from the weight of everything else. An infinite instant of peace.</p>
<p>At the end of the ride, we immediately went back inside. Nice - but normal. That sensation was gone, but the happiness of having experienced it remained.</p>
<p>I put the mug back in its place, after wrapping it in soft paper, with the same smile as before. I turned around and, walking away, I felt much lighter.</p>
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      <pubDate>Wed, 24 Jun 2026 13:30:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <atom:updated>2026-06-24T13:30:00.000Z</atom:updated>
      <author>stefano@dragas.it (Stefano Marinelli)</author>
      <dc:creator>Stefano Marinelli</dc:creator>
      <category>memories</category>
      <category>reflections</category>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Winter is Over</title>
      <link>https://my-notes.dragas.net/2026/06/09/winter-is-over/</link>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">https://my-notes.dragas.net/2026/06/09/winter-is-over/</guid>
      <description><![CDATA[A blood pressure cuff, a worn folder with someone else&apos;s name on it, and the walks to the pharmacy through the freezing air. Winter is over, thankfully.]]></description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The smartwatch reminds me it&#39;s time to take my blood pressure. 
I get up from the desk and walk towards the living room. I&#39;m in a vest - it&#39;s easy. I sit down and put on the cuff.</p>
<p>My eyes fall on the folder still resting on that table, full of notes jotted down on a sheet of paper.
Traces of medicine boxes, of appointments made, some crossed out. The name is still legible on that worn folder, and it is not my name.</p>
<p>I turn my gaze and find other boxes. More supplements and bottles. I close my eyes and the walks to the pharmacy come back to me. The freezing air, the scarf, my hands reddened by the winter wind. But I went on foot, for that small outlet - that half hour of movement in a static time.</p>
<p>The pharmacist would ask questions and offer advice. I nodded and smiled, but understood nothing. I just wanted that time to end. Then she would ask how I was. Fine. Even though I was eating sweets and losing weight. Even though I slept like a stone, but little. Even though I dreamed - and not of what I would have liked.</p>
<p>Then I see the antibiotics - mine, this time - that I took a few weeks ago. When, at last, I could afford to be ill myself. For a few days. I can&#39;t stay away from my life for long.</p>
<p>I look at the calendar and the weather forecast on the device in front of my eyes. Sun, warmth. The plan is for a fine day out. I think to myself that I need to put that folder away. Winter is over, thankfully.</p>
<p>I press the button and wait: 104/58.</p>
<p>I get up and return to my chair, without looking back.</p>
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      <pubDate>Tue, 09 Jun 2026 18:54:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <atom:updated>2026-06-09T18:54:00.000Z</atom:updated>
      <author>stefano@dragas.it (Stefano Marinelli)</author>
      <dc:creator>Stefano Marinelli</dc:creator>
      <category>reflections</category>
      <category>family</category>
      <category>memories</category>
      <category>health</category>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>The Lock</title>
      <link>https://my-notes.dragas.net/2026/05/31/the-lock/</link>
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      <description><![CDATA[An empty wardrobe, a rescued pendulum clock, and a lingering scent in the kitchen. Closing a door, forcing the key a little, and leaving a piece of life behind.]]></description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The lock is harder than I remembered.
The sound is the same. The door opens without effort, the whole hallway laid out before me.</p>
<p>On the left, the paintings are gone. On the right, the bright living room sits bare, stripped of its small ornaments. My eye looks for the photo of me with the red telephone, forgetting it is already at my own house. The sofa has been shifted slightly, the small table pushed into a corner. It was the only way to get through with the walker. The shutter is up, the curtain open onto a pleasant, sunlit day.</p>
<p>The big living room television is gone, leaving a patch of different colour on the cabinet. Next to it, the kitchen. The fridge is off, the small television also gone, the table pushed into a corner. The smell of the stuffed olives she used to make for me is still there. Or perhaps it is only in my mind. Without thinking, I open the oven. Empty, as it never was. I close it again. The mantel clock has vanished, and so has the Frate Indovino calendar. The fireplace is still sealed. They said it was the regulations, but grandfather was tired of carrying the wood up. The old boiler is off, its dial worn down. </p>
<p>I turn back and step toward the hallway. The old pendulum clock is still there, stopped. As a child, in the old house, I used to play around it, circling it. It looked enormous to me. When they moved, grandfather cut it short at the bottom and hung it on the wall. Crooked, otherwise it would stop. I lift it off the wall, revealing the mark behind it, and set it down on the floor. I remembered it lighter. To the left, the room where I slept only once. I smile, because everything is the same. I open a drawer, empty. The family photos used to be in that drawer. I close it. On the wall, my embossed poster with a cat and a dog. Faded with the years, flattened by games and house moves. I fought to keep it from being thrown out, even in that state. </p>
<p>I leave the room and move on to theirs.
The photos are gone, and all the furniture is polished and clean. A ray of sunlight comes through the window and falls on the chest of drawers - it&#39;s morning, the sun comes from the east. When they were here, the shutter was always half-lowered at this hour. They would get up very early and take a nap mid-morning. Then they&#39;d raise it again, and I&#39;d know I would find them awake. Ready to make me something good when I was hungry. Or just a comfort, when I was tired.</p>
<p>I turn and go into the room across the hall. I open the doors of the large wardrobe, but it is empty. My comics are gone, and so are my toys. All of their things are gone. How big that wardrobe is, and how full it used to be!
There are still some things on the old red table. Thirty-five years ago, give or take, in its place there was the cardboard box. He had brought it home so we could play with it, and we had turned it into a kind of fort, with all our friends. It seemed enormous, but it was probably smaller than that table. So many memories, here. Out of habit, I look at the corners of the room. My friend had brought the fishing worms and we had forgotten to close the box. They had spread all over the room. But I got away with it, that time too.</p>
<p>I leave the room, on the right the brown bathroom. In good shape, but worn by time. I didn&#39;t remember that handle. Ah yes - grandfather had put it in when he was starting to have trouble moving. The shower could use some work, but it still functions.
I keep walking and reach the other bathroom - <em>my</em> bathroom. The tub is still untouched, even after more than forty years. It can&#39;t have been used five times. The toilet still has its original seat, in perfect condition. That day, just back from school, I was peeing when she came running into the bathroom. She was crying. A boy in her class had insulted her. &quot;Don&#39;t worry, just tell me who it is, I&#39;ll come to school and your big brother will have a word with him.&quot; She smiled and calmed down, while grandmother was telling us to wash our hands because everything was ready.
The bidet is still gleaming, while the sink shows a few more signs of wear than I remembered. Maybe, in the last few years, she had taken some shortcuts to clean it more quickly. But I haven&#39;t been in here for a long time, maybe I&#39;m not remembering well. The tiles are still spotless. Except for the one near the window, where I dropped the hammer.</p>
<p>I take another walk through, trying to memorise everything, one more time. The bare walls, to my eyes, are still full of life. The cabinets full of photographs. And again, I catch the smell coming from the kitchen.</p>
<p>I take down the pendulum clock and lift it onto my shoulder. I reach the door. I open it and step out. I turn, looking once more, for the last time, at the long, bright hallway. </p>
<p>I close the door, forcing the key a little, and tear the label off the doorbell.</p>
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      <pubDate>Sun, 31 May 2026 06:42:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <atom:updated>2026-05-31T06:42:00.000Z</atom:updated>
      <author>stefano@dragas.it (Stefano Marinelli)</author>
      <dc:creator>Stefano Marinelli</dc:creator>
      <category>memories</category>
      <category>family</category>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>My City</title>
      <link>https://my-notes.dragas.net/2026/05/22/my-city/</link>
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      <description><![CDATA[I spent years trying to return to my city, only to understand that what I was looking for had disappeared long before I did.]]></description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A little while ago I watched a five-second clip - an ancient, weathered column. That was all it took to identify the exact place where those images had been filmed. A moment later they widened the shot, and I recognised the precise spot. It was a city. My city.</p>
<p>Childhood memories stay imprinted in the mind far, far longer than those accumulated in adulthood.</p>
<p>In the square full of columns where that footage was shot, I used to go often with my grandmother, as a child, to the fruit and vegetable market - with that strong, distinctive scent of a herb market. As a teenager, I would sit on those low walls and lean against those columns with my friends, talking about the things teenagers talk about, dreaming and living. Those columns, like other corners of that city, were my world. And the pizzeria nearby, which tempted us every afternoon with the fragrance of freshly baked focaccia.</p>
<p>Ancient cities have a particular quality: they remain unchanged in space and time, allowing memories to reinforce their own persistence.
There was a phase of my life when that city was perfect. I knew almost all my peers, at least by sight. All I had to do was step out at half past six in the evening, walk into the centre, and run into someone to exchange a few words with or take a stroll. No appointments needed - we all knew that if we were free, we only had to go into the centre and we would find each other, and then make plans from there. Mobile phones either didn&#39;t exist or were still expensive and primitive, and yet social life existed all the same.</p>
<p>When the time came to go to university, many kilometres away, it felt like a trauma. I knew something would change - who knows, perhaps forever - and I decided to cling to my old life. Every weekend I took the train back, even if only for forty-eight hours, to keep living my life - that life - which I had earned with so much effort and which was slipping through my fingers. Some of my friends had stayed in the area; others hadn&#39;t moved far, choosing universities nearby or going straight into work.</p>
<p>A few months in, on the train, I was so excited about a dinner organised at one of their houses that I had jotted down notes about the countless things that had happened to me in Bologna during that period - things I couldn&#39;t wait to share. I arrived right on time, busied myself helping out - nothing was supposed to change - until we sat down at the table. The conversation drifted across the usual topics, the usual people, and when I took the floor to talk about my experiences, the conversation dropped shortly after. I didn&#39;t think much of it - conversations have a life of their own, take unexpected turns. The second time, when directly asked, I started again, and again the conversation dropped. </p>
<p>I was stunned: the lapse, I realised, was not accidental. So I fell quiet, participating half-heartedly in the usual talk about the usual people, the usual places, the usual things. At the end of dinner, a couple of friends who had also moved away - to Milan, for their studies - came over and, pulling me aside, said something that stopped me cold: &quot;<em>They&#39;re not interested in what we&#39;re doing outside of here. Those who stayed have no interest in what happens to us out there. Some out of a kind of resentment, others simply out of genuine indifference. Their whole world is here - and what we do beyond it is, for them, completely irrelevant.</em>&quot;</p>
<p>I realised they were absolutely right. Even when we had greeted each other at the start of dinner, after weeks apart, no one had asked: &quot;So, how&#39;s your new life going?&quot; They had continued seeing each other often, but I had stayed away for a while, held back by exams. This seemed to produce no variation on the theme whatsoever. I ran a social experiment: I took the floor again and shared a piece of local gossip. In that moment I had their complete attention - everyone, and I mean everyone, hung on my every word until the very last detail.
I went home incredulous. What I had feared had probably come to pass - my life had changed, yes, but not so dramatically. But for them, my life was now different, outside their circle of interest, and in that moment foreign to them, unless it aligned entirely with their expectations. My determination not to cut the umbilical cord only worked if my social life revolved around events that had happened between Friday and Sunday. If something strange had happened to me on a Wednesday in Bologna - indifference. If I had a funny story - silence. If instead I had mentioned that a former classmate had broken up with his girlfriend - total attention. The whole train journey, then, served only to feed in me the illusion of a continuity that was already compromised. I concluded the effort was one-sided, and gradually, I let go.</p>
<p>But I didn&#39;t give up on reclaiming what was mine. As soon as I graduated - though I was already teaching and working - I set about finding a way to get closer again. To return to my city. And this desire was so strong that it didn&#39;t allow me, at least back then, to consider Bologna as a permanent home in any way. I hadn&#39;t even bothered to adapt, to make too many friends - &quot;I&#39;ll be going back to my city soon.&quot;</p>
<p>Having kept good relations with everyone, I immediately started sending out CVs. Letting people know - friends, acquaintances, contacts - that I was ready to come back, ready to start from the bottom if needed, just to return.</p>
<p>Many pretended not to hear. Others called me in for interviews - and when they understood what I wanted and what I could do, they dismissed me with a flat &quot;you&#39;re overqualified for what we&#39;re looking for.&quot; I was told my skills exceeded those of the owner, and that was completely inconceivable.
I tried to enter a public competition - nothing doing: the role required a diploma in IT subjects. A degree, though a higher qualification, would not be valid. And a strong knowledge of French was required - though no one could explain why. I understood.
Later, I discovered the competition had been tailored specifically for someone who was always going to get the role. My interest had only &quot;complicated things.&quot;
Undeterred, I pressed on - until I reached the encouraging offer: &quot;You work for me for three years for free, I sell the service. If I make enough, I&#39;ll pay you. Otherwise we part ways - you&#39;re young, you have time.&quot; When I asked for more details about what &quot;enough&quot; meant, the person grew irritated and ended the conversation quickly, calling me a &quot;presumptuous kid.&quot;</p>
<p>Meanwhile, in Bologna I had a dream salary and was doing work I loved. In a city that was not &quot;mine&quot;, where I knew no one, but where people actually wanted to use my skills. Since part of my work involved training funded by European grants, I decided to try bringing that kind of training to my city. They already had IT courses - the classic &quot;How to use Windows to write in Word&quot; kind. I would simply bring what I was doing in Bologna, manage everything myself, adding value without taking anything away from anyone. No one listened. Determined, I spoke to an influential person and put forward my proposal. He told me, in all honesty, that this type of course had &quot;always&quot; been run by an elderly engineer, now in his eighties, and that there was no interest in expanding these projects into more modern forms. &quot;If you want, I can look into it and try to speak to a politician, but I can&#39;t promise anything. Even if it&#39;s paid for by European funds.&quot;</p>
<p>That afternoon I drove for 30 kms and sat by my sea. It was moving at just the right pace - that steady, rhythmic sound, the smell of the shoreline and the fine mist of salt that clings to your lips, so that when you run your tongue across them you can taste it too. And I understood, beyond any doubt, that my life would not be in that city.</p>
<p>Almost all of my friends - the ones who didn&#39;t have their own businesses in the city - were now scattered across the world. The results had been the same for all of us. The ancient walls were still there, but &quot;my people&quot; were gone.
My city no longer existed. Perhaps it had never quite existed at all. Or perhaps simply the fourth dimension - time - had erased what had made it so desirable to me. And I stopped trying, with the bitterness of someone who understands that the dream was always a pale illusion.</p>
<p>I don&#39;t go back to my city very often. Sometimes years pass between one visit and the next, because the feeling is divided: on one side, the sweet pleasure of memories. On the other, the sharp sting of rejection. Not of me, but of improvement, of change. The city continues, even today, to live in a self-referential closure, where many of its more ambitious children have found their paths far away, while those who remain indifferent to what happens beyond its walls keep speaking to the instincts of those who stayed. The population is in freefall.</p>
<p>When I speak today with someone who remained, that person still carries that sense of quiet resentment - as if the fault for all of this were mine, and the fault of everyone who left. But I don&#39;t hold it against them. They live inside a bubble made of former glory - family businesses, public sector jobs, privileged positions. They have never seen or experienced what it means to want to be, in some way, part of something important. So I have stopped defending myself too, because my city - if it ever existed in the form I knew it - has been gone for over twenty-five years. 
The market hasn&#39;t been held in that square for a long time now. The pizzeria on the corner has closed.</p>
<p>Now it is their city.</p>
<p>Beautiful, to visit.
But not mine.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 22 May 2026 07:45:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <atom:updated>2026-05-22T07:45:00.000Z</atom:updated>
      <author>stefano@dragas.it (Stefano Marinelli)</author>
      <dc:creator>Stefano Marinelli</dc:creator>
      <category>memories</category>
      <category>change</category>
      <category>friendship</category>
      <category>people</category>
      <category>reflections</category>
      <category>italy</category>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>The Red Envelope</title>
      <link>https://my-notes.dragas.net/2026/05/15/the-red-envelope/</link>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">https://my-notes.dragas.net/2026/05/15/the-red-envelope/</guid>
      <description><![CDATA[A red envelope reopened after many years. A few pages, too many questions.]]></description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A red envelope. Kept in a drawer for many, many years.</p>
<p>I opened it.</p>
<p>Inside, another cover, cardboard-coloured. I didn’t remember that.</p>
<p>The plastic binding had darkened; the contents had not.</p>
<p>I read the dates. I started reading.</p>
<p>I closed it, as I had done so many years before. To protect myself.</p>
<p>Then I opened it again. And I realised that no, I will never be ready. Not even many, many years from now.</p>
<p>I read the last pages.</p>
<p>I stayed there, listening to myself.</p>
<p>How many years, still. How many questions. How many doubts.</p>
<p>I looked at it and made it disappear forever.</p>
<p>Regretting it an instant later.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 15 May 2026 19:12:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <atom:updated>2026-05-15T19:12:00.000Z</atom:updated>
      <author>stefano@dragas.it (Stefano Marinelli)</author>
      <dc:creator>Stefano Marinelli</dc:creator>
      <category>reflections</category>
      <category>memories</category>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>The Last Shift</title>
      <link>https://my-notes.dragas.net/2026/05/06/the-last-shift/</link>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">https://my-notes.dragas.net/2026/05/06/the-last-shift/</guid>
      <description><![CDATA[A forgotten cotton swab in an old cabinet brings back the memory of a terrifying afternoon on the road, the indifference of crowds, and the quiet dignity of a stranger&apos;s last day at work.]]></description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>While I was doing some work around the house, a screwdriver slipped and I gave myself a small cut on my hand. Nothing serious, but I decided to disinfect it and put on a plaster. But where are the plasters? My wife thought she had put them in the bathroom cabinet, but... nothing. Failing that, I remembered there were some in the cabinet that had been moved - eleven years ago - from the old house. Old, perhaps, but probably still usable. When I opened the cabinet, I found a small cotton swab, still sealed, whose existence I had completely forgotten. I smiled - which drew my wife&#39;s curiosity - because...</p>
<p>That afternoon in 2011, I was on top of the world. I was getting ready for a series of connected events I had been looking forward to for some time. I was going to an introductory meeting with an important potential client - one that would have allowed me to do wonderful things - and then a journey of around 150 kilometres to somewhere else, for a rather important evening, and the following morning, another work meeting. In those two days I would lay the foundations for my entire future and, after such a long time, I was truly, truly proud. I looked at myself in the mirror before leaving the house, and I liked what I saw. My smile was full, rich, bright. I decided to take a photo of myself in front of the mirror, to capture that moment.</p>
<p>Keys - taken. Wallet - taken. Laptop - of course. Suitcase with everything I&#39;ll need - yes. Does the car have a full tank of diesel? Yes. After closing the shutters and taking one last satisfied look at the living room, I locked up and got into the car.</p>
<p>The <em>Thick as a Brick</em> CD - to get myself going - and off. The journey went smoothly, filled with thoughts about what I would propose, how I would play it. And the meeting was a success: their situation was a disaster, and my project would give them stability within a few days. They approved it immediately, without any hesitation. In the meantime, an unexpected message had arrived, which I only saw at the end of the meeting. This message carried considerable weight - perhaps as much as the previous meeting, though in an entirely different context - and I read it twice, feeling my heartbeat shift. I arranged an evening programme, given how close my hotel was to this person.</p>
<p>I put on the <em>Thick as a Brick</em> CD again, this time turning up the volume and driving more calmly. I watched the people in the other cars and tried to read their expressions. Now and then, someone would look back at me. Who knows whether my expression gave away my emotions. What I do know is that I got a few smiles in return.</p>
<p>While I was comfortably overtaking, I felt something strange in my mouth. I paid no attention - I had eaten a sandwich not long before - and carried on singing. Until the moment I glanced down and saw fresh blood on my shirt. I pulled down the sun visor and looked in the mirror. My entire mouth was red, and a trickle of blood was running down my face. I opened my mouth and saw a whole pool of fresh blood, with no way of understanding where it was coming from. I froze. I turned off the music. I indicated right and pulled into the first service area I could find.</p>
<p>I couldn&#39;t make sense of anything. On instinct, I just thought about rinsing. I opened a small bottle of water I had brought with me, rinsed and spat out of the car door. Again and again, but the more I rinsed, the more the blood increased. The pool beside my door had become enormous, swelled by the blood diluting with water. I decided to run to the service station bathroom.</p>
<p>I don&#39;t like the sight of blood - but I immediately thought to bring my bag with me, with my precious laptop inside. They get stolen all the time, precisely when you&#39;re travelling alone and you step away toward the bathroom. The blood kept flowing, kept filling my mouth. That taste, that terrible taste, wouldn&#39;t leave me. I couldn&#39;t understand. The more I tried to find the source, the more agitated I became, the more it accumulated in my mouth.</p>
<p>I started to feel dizzy. I couldn&#39;t tell whether it was from the fright or from losing too much blood, but in either case, there was no time to work it out. I decided to sit down, not far from the sinks, on the floor. The service station was fortunately clean, and various people were coming and going. I had come from a work meeting - I was well dressed, with my bag. I was pale, my shirt stained, and visibly worried. I decided to half-close my eyes for a moment, without allowing myself to faint - and I decided that no, I was not going to die there, like that.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, dozens of people came and went. Lorry drivers, family men, businesspeople, young people and not so young - it was a busy service station at peak time. And I was there, worried and deeply ashamed, sitting in the corner of a motorway service station bathroom, alone, with blood coming out of my mouth. Many people saw me. Nobody asked if I needed help. I didn&#39;t need help - I would have asked - but nobody cared. Nobody alerted the staff. At best, I was invisible. At worst, someone to glance at sideways with disgust.</p>
<p>I could have cried - from shame, from fear, from the sense of emptiness. Then, all at once, I understood that no, I was not going to die in this corner of a service station, and that, in fact, the bleeding had stopped a few minutes ago.</p>
<p>I waited a moment longer and stood up. I rinsed the shirt - cold water removes fresh blood, a friend had taught me - and decided I would change it as soon as I got back to the car. Or perhaps not - what if the blood started flowing again?</p>
<p>I rinsed my mouth once more and returned to the car. I saw the pool of my blood beside the door, stepped over it, and continued on my way, with the headache of someone who had come close to passing out.</p>
<p>After about ten kilometres, I felt the taste of blood again. I opened my mouth and saw it was coming from a tooth - that wisdom tooth. It had decided to push through on exactly that day, far from home, with such important plans ahead. I reassured myself and simply managed the situation. I understood that by breathing through my mouth and letting air in, it would stop. My dear old platelets - you just have to stop rinsing them away.</p>
<p>Calmer, I continued my journey to my destination, my hotel. I checked in and went to my room to have a long shower. I didn&#39;t cancel the rest of my plans, but adapted accordingly. I took off the shirt, looked at it carefully, and decided that if the blood didn&#39;t come out, I would dye it a dark colour once I got home. I checked that the others were in order - they were, and I always pack at least one spare. The shower was long and relaxing. I changed into the other shirt - the one I had packed not for work, but for the evening - and checked myself in the mirror one more time before going out.</p>
<p>That night I fell asleep very, very late. The room was exactly as I had left it - yet somehow emptier. And no, I wouldn&#39;t have wanted to be alone. I didn&#39;t feel calm. Yes, the wisdom tooth and the bleeding seemed to have stopped hours ago - but I was alone, in an anonymous, clean, sterile hotel room. And no, I wouldn&#39;t have wanted to die there either - I thought - though this time almost mocking myself for the excessive fear of the afternoon.</p>
<p>When I woke the next morning, I made an unpleasant discovery: the pillow and the sheets were heavily stained with blood. I felt guilty. White sheets, a wonderfully comfortable pillow - ruined. After a shower, I went down for breakfast, making sure to eat only soft things. I went back to the room and got ready for the next appointment, though worried about this new episode of blood loss.</p>
<p>I went down to reception to check out. The receptionist was different from the one the previous evening: an older man, professional, with a reassuring smile - but with wrinkles that showed the smile was simply a professional habit. I handed over the room key and explained what had happened, asking to pay for the extra cleaning or any damage my blood might have caused to their linen.</p>
<p>All at once, his smile became real. <em>&quot;You can&#39;t imagine what we find in the rooms&quot;</em>, he murmured. And he asked me to wait. After about a minute, he came back with a small white bag. <em>&quot;These are two gum swabs. If it happens again, place one on the affected area. It will absorb the blood and help the wound close.&quot;</em> He wouldn&#39;t let me pay for them. I thanked him warmly and said I hoped we&#39;d meet again. <em>&quot;Oh, that won&#39;t happen. Today is my last day.&quot;</em> As he said it, though, his smile shifted, and his face settled back into the shape of his wrinkles, until the greeting for the next guest.</p>
<p><em>&quot;I&#39;ve never understood what that thing is, but I suppose it&#39;s ready to be thrown away by now?&quot;</em> My wife knew about my adventure on that trip, but some details were and will remain mine alone.</p>
<p><em>&quot;Nothing, just a swab to absorb blood in case of problems with a tooth. It&#39;s fifteen years old, but I want to keep it anyway.&quot;</em></p>
<p>She asked no more questions, and carried on looking for a plaster to cover my slight abrasion.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <pubDate>Wed, 06 May 2026 07:45:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <atom:updated>2026-05-06T07:45:00.000Z</atom:updated>
      <author>stefano@dragas.it (Stefano Marinelli)</author>
      <dc:creator>Stefano Marinelli</dc:creator>
      <category>memories</category>
      <category>people</category>
      <category>health</category>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Anatoly&apos;s Mother</title>
      <link>https://my-notes.dragas.net/2026/04/22/anatolys-mother/</link>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">https://my-notes.dragas.net/2026/04/22/anatolys-mother/</guid>
      <description><![CDATA[Anatoly&apos;s mother waits for her son&apos;s messages with the quiet, stubborn hope only a mother can have. In the space between one phone call and the next, war enters the house through silences, small gestures, and the unbearable weight of what everyone already knows.]]></description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Anatoly&#39;s mother had her eyes lowered, beneath the table. &quot;Why are you looking at your phone? The roast is getting cold!&quot; 
She put the phone down with a quick, seemingly involuntary gesture. &quot;I haven&#39;t heard from my son in two days. It happens, sometimes: at the front they have no signal, and until the mission is over, no one gets in touch. But this time... I don&#39;t know.&quot;
We looked at each other for a second and reassured her. 
We all knew he was heading to the front, to replace a young man who had been seriously wounded. We all put on a mask of a smile and began to eat, talking about the usual trivialities people talk about over a meal: it was the 25th of March and spring was beginning to make itself felt. And Anatoly&#39;s mother, who has worked for our family for over ten years, had already started putting flowers on the balconies of the house. A way of adding colour to such a grey time.</p>
<p>On International Women&#39;s Day, Anatoly&#39;s mother was smiling. Her son had sent her a message with his wishes. He had been moved to the rear lines a few days earlier and, at last, could sleep in a bed. Could wash. Because in the trenches, he told her, days passed all the same, sleeping on the ground, without washing. And in those few hours of light sleep, the nightmare was always the same: the sound of a drone - the kind of drone that, if you hear it, it is already too late.
But now, thankfully, he was calmer. Perhaps he might even manage to come home for a few days - who knows - to see his sisters. He wasn&#39;t convinced himself; he said it with conviction. The conviction of someone who hopes it might happen. 
&quot;And you, <em>Mamma</em>, how are you?&quot; 
She laughed, though moved: she was safe, in Italy, in a warm house with people who have treated her as part of the family for many years. With her aches and pains as age advances, she is well. And yet he worried about how she was doing.</p>
<p>Only a few months earlier, at the end of 2025, Anatoly&#39;s mother had received a message. &quot;<em>Mamma</em>, I&#39;m scared. I don&#39;t want to die.&quot; He was travelling to the front, knowing he would remain there - hopefully - for a long time. An early return would have been decidedly ill-omened, because you only come back early in two ways: wounded or dead. &quot;You won&#39;t die, my son. Be brave.&quot; 
We have known her for many years; she is an extremely strong woman and could say nothing else. Her eyes, as she told us, said everything: she would have run there, to take him, to bring him home. But her country is at war and there was nothing she could do. Thirty-five years old, in good health and, like all his brothers, a handsome young man. Until a few months earlier he had been working in Poland, but at a certain point he had to return, and although all his older brothers were already at war, they needed him too. He accepted because he had no other choice. 
&quot;And you, how are you?&quot; Anatoly&#39;s mother smiled. &quot;I&#39;m fine, my son. I&#39;m fine, don&#39;t worry about me.&quot; She told us this with a smile. The smile of someone who, every day, hopes a message will arrive from her son. &quot;I&#39;m fine, <em>Mamma</em>, don&#39;t worry.&quot; Even when he was under the bombs. Even when his friend was killed, hit by a drone.</p>
<p>On the morning of the 26th of March, Anatoly&#39;s mother was on her way back from the hospital, to collect test results from a few days earlier. When the phone rang, at an unusual hour and from a family member, she answered without a second&#39;s thought. Her expression changed instantly and her voice broke. They told her nothing, only that she was needed at home. She already knew what had happened. A mother knows without knowing. She packed in a rush, throwing into a suitcase whatever she could, and managed to catch the bus that same evening. Over twenty-four hours of travel expected, which would become many, many more.</p>
<p>Anatoly&#39;s mother said goodbye to her son on the 2nd of April, burying him in the local cemetery. The mud was so deep that the municipality had to intervene with heavy equipment to allow the ceremony to take place. The mayor published photographs. His friends, a video. She saw him for the last time, his face clearly recognisable and at peace, though marked by trauma and wounds. But they told her not to touch him: only the visible parts were still presentable. 
She approached his coffin and leaned down, supported by one of her daughters. She had always known - always known - it would end like this. But Anatoly&#39;s mother, like all mothers, had hoped until the very last that, at least for him, fate would have looked the other way.
Their family is Catholic, but the funeral was celebrated by Orthodox priests: the Catholics were busy with Easter preparations and were unable to celebrate the funeral of young Anatoly. But none of this matters very, very much to Anatoly&#39;s mother.</p>
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      <pubDate>Wed, 22 Apr 2026 18:42:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <atom:updated>2026-04-22T18:42:00.000Z</atom:updated>
      <author>stefano@dragas.it (Stefano Marinelli)</author>
      <dc:creator>Stefano Marinelli</dc:creator>
      <category>war</category>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>I&apos;m Still Guybrush</title>
      <link>https://my-notes.dragas.net/2026/04/14/im-still-guybrush/</link>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">https://my-notes.dragas.net/2026/04/14/im-still-guybrush/</guid>
      <description><![CDATA[A jolt before dawn, a terminal waiting in the dark, and the Monkey Island soundtrack pulling me back to a warm summer evening in 1991. The screen has always been my safe harbour - it just took me thirty years to understand why.]]></description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A jolt. I check the time: it&#39;s early. Too early. But I know this state of mind, and staying in bed would serve no purpose. I hate it, but there&#39;s nothing I can do. I lifted my head and immediately felt the weight of my thoughts, of what I heard last night. An evening in which the hope - held for many years - of never again having to go to bed with certain thoughts, shattered.</p>
<p>Still carrying the scent of coffee, I put on my earbuds, started my music, and switched on my computer. The terminal was waiting for me, as always. I smiled.</p>
<pre><code>bastille create new_project 15.0-RELEASE 10.1.1.1 bastille0
</code></pre>
<p>I entered <em>my</em> world, where time is measured in beats per second. I began to fly, through that series of words incomprehensible to most, yet dear and familiar to me. Those words don&#39;t judge me, don&#39;t accuse me, don&#39;t attack me. I feel safe, among the bits of my computer.</p>
<p>When I heard arguing, I would run to my room and close the door. I would switch on my record player, turn up the volume, and leave the present behind. Arguments and fights, or just ill tempers. Situations that were sometimes difficult - too difficult for a child, too thin to turn to food, too small to truly understand what was happening. No one could really comprehend. And I didn&#39;t want to talk about it with anyone, because the one time I had, it was later used to make fun of me.</p>
<p>When my first computer arrived, I was too young to use it for anything other than games - at least for a while - so I flew on fantasy alone. When I played Maniac Mansion, I was in that house with them. When it was Zak McKracken&#39;s turn, I travelled the world with him. I had no interest in finishing the game - only in seeing the &quot;world&quot; and discovering what was out there. When The Secret of Monkey Island arrived, I was in the Caribbean with Guybrush. I <em>was</em> Guybrush.</p>
<p>Inside my computer - inside that screen - everything was predictable. My video games were a safe harbour. No one would insult me, humiliate me, scold me. They were worlds where I could express myself without being judged. My brain was stimulated. I felt safe.</p>
<p>My mind is still desperately thirsty today - my spirit is still that of the child who travelled, and my safety, my world, are still my bits. The operating systems I love are my blank page. The keys on the keyboard spread the ink. The voice of the community, my friends - the people with whom to share a passion, and what makes the world a more liveable place.</p>
<p>I was testing the setup, with a satisfied smile, when the Monkey Island soundtrack began to play.</p>
<p>I looked out of the window and it was still dark. I turned my head forward and I was at my desk, with my Amiga, on a warm summer evening in 1991. In my eyes, the tears of a child setting off on a new adventure, shutting the whole world out of his room. For the first time, he was wearing the clothes of that character. For the first time, the warm breeze coming through the window carried the scent of the Caribbean. That child, that evening, was Guybrush.</p>
<p>I am still Guybrush.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <pubDate>Tue, 14 Apr 2026 07:41:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <atom:updated>2026-04-14T07:41:00.000Z</atom:updated>
      <author>stefano@dragas.it (Stefano Marinelli)</author>
      <dc:creator>Stefano Marinelli</dc:creator>
      <category>reflections</category>
      <category>memories</category>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Two Seashells</title>
      <link>https://my-notes.dragas.net/2026/04/11/two-seashells/</link>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">https://my-notes.dragas.net/2026/04/11/two-seashells/</guid>
      <description><![CDATA[A chance encounter with Ivan Graziani in the mid-nineties, a nod I didn&apos;t deserve, and the years it took to understand what he already knew about our sea and the places we leave behind.]]></description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I was driving. Thinking. Listening to music. Resetting my mind. Left and right, haze, flatland and cultivated fields. 
I watched the road markings follow one another, all identical, in time with the prog-rock I was listening to. 
Hypnotic. 
They seemed to do it on purpose. I smiled. Suddenly, the mix changed, and one of Ivan Graziani&#39;s masterpieces began to play. And my smile faded.</p>
<p>When I was a teenager, I regarded him with suspicion. He had been born a few kilometres from me, many years earlier, had studied in my city, and yet he didn&#39;t appreciate it. Somehow, I disliked him. I liked his sounds, not his words - so hostile towards the places I held dear.</p>
<p>And yet his music made me fly. I would travel, remember. The few memories of a teenager, but already precious. His sea - <em>my sea</em> - I could have written those words myself. Or perhaps not, but the feeling is the same. Too complex for a teenager. I didn&#39;t think about it.</p>
<p>One evening I crossed paths with him, right in &quot;our&quot; city. I recognised him and gave him a nod. He returned it with a smile - eloquent, communicative. To an idiotic kid who still hadn&#39;t understood a thing. He, on the other hand, had already understood everything.
A few years later, when I read about his death, it didn&#39;t touch me. He was young - but old enough and distant enough from me. Very distant. But he stayed forever young, and I, year after year, drew closer to him. In age, certainly. 
But I gradually understood that he had been right - oh, how right he had been - about so many other things. And his warm words became a comfort, breaking through the solitude, knowing I was not the only one to feel those specific emotions.</p>
<p>As he described our sea, the asphalt turned to sand and the road markings to waves. Yes, it is our sea he is singing about! I can hear it in the details. In the depth of the emotions. How much he missed it, just as I miss it now. 
We are like two seashells, he and I. We can be anywhere, but hold one to your ear and you will always hear the sound of the sea.</p>
<p>My smile returned, wider, calmer. If I could go back to that evening in the mid-nineties, I would thank him. But there is no need. He had already understood. Long before I could understand myself, long before life taught me to listen to my own voice.</p>
<p><strong>Thank you, Ivan</strong>.</p>
<p>I flick the indicator. Time to park.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 17:35:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <atom:updated>2026-04-11T17:35:00.000Z</atom:updated>
      <author>stefano@dragas.it (Stefano Marinelli)</author>
      <dc:creator>Stefano Marinelli</dc:creator>
      <category>memories</category>
      <category>reflections</category>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>The Usual, Thanks</title>
      <link>https://my-notes.dragas.net/2026/03/27/the-usual-thanks/</link>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">https://my-notes.dragas.net/2026/03/27/the-usual-thanks/</guid>
      <description><![CDATA[A snowy drive to a meeting that turned out to have nothing to do with IT - and a pizzaiolo who understood politics better than the politicians.]]></description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The day is drawing to a close and, before dinner, I sit down to read the news. The count from today&#39;s referendum is nearly over and the result seems fairly clear-cut. Some are celebrating, others &quot;reflecting&quot; on what went wrong. Everyone is talking. No one, by now, remembers what was actually being voted on. Perhaps, for the average voter, it never mattered. Perhaps the real subject didn&#39;t interest the politicians either. The purpose, as always, was a pure battle between parties.</p>
<p>That winter was cold - the kind of cold we haven&#39;t seen since - and that day I would gladly have stayed home, working from my slow but stable ADSL connection of less than 1 Mbit/sec. Poor even then, but necessity breeds resourcefulness. It was urgent, though. Necessary. Two words that have always made everything else seem secondary. The front door made an unusual sound - a delayed click. The ice had crept into the mechanism, and my nose immediately caught that scent of fog and snow together, so rare to find combined.</p>
<p>Had it been an ordinary day, I would have watched from the window, opening it now and then to savour that fragrance, stretching out an arm to feel the frozen flake settle on my hand, already chilled and dampened by the freezing mist.</p>
<p>The car was in the garage, but the moment I pulled out, the wheels showed signs of poor grip. Even winter tyres weren&#39;t enough. But motivation - that was more than enough. As I drove slowly, struggling to see the road through the thickening fog, I was already thinking about the potential new project they were going to propose. I had put forward a couple of ideas - in my view extremely useful and affordable - and they had shown a certain enthusiasm. But the journey was much longer than expected, so my mind wandered everywhere, without my even noticing. I wondered whether I would have made the same trip, in the same conditions, without this urgency. But urgency, when it concerns public budgets, must always be respected.</p>
<p>There were no parking spaces, except… a mound of snow. I didn&#39;t think twice and climbed on top of it, thanks to the rear-wheel drive, though I couldn&#39;t quite make it all the way. The car, being short, fitted within the allotted space. I smiled, and a snowflake landed on my forehead.</p>
<p>I headed straight to my contact&#39;s office. He greeted me with a triumphant smile. &quot;You made it in this weather. You&#39;re a person of incredible motivation. Exactly what we need. We&#39;ve had some ideas here, and we&#39;d like to share them with you.&quot; I was about to speak, but: &quot;We&#39;re confident our collaboration will be extremely long and lasting. We all agree. All of us.&quot;</p>
<p>That  <em>all of us</em>, for reasons I couldn&#39;t explain, made my blood run cold.</p>
<p>Two other people arrived whom I had never seen before. They introduced themselves, courteously. In that moment I thought they must have been printing smiles in that office - identical ones. Or perhaps they were fraternal twins, separated at birth. I smiled too, to blend in with this carnival of good cheer, still without having said a single word.</p>
<p>&quot;You are young, upright, well-regarded, respected. You work in an innovative, valued sector. You are someone who can be trusted, and we need you.&quot;</p>
<p>I strengthened my smile, turning it into my own.</p>
<p>&quot;One of our current problems is the stagnation of the political class, in the face of demographic change. The elderly are dying, the young are growing up with different ideas, and there are many new arrivals. We&#39;re expanding demographically - and not through new births.&quot;</p>
<p>I put my polite smile back on, to mask the fact that I wasn&#39;t understanding a thing. I didn&#39;t even try, this time, to take the floor.</p>
<p>&quot;Many people who come to live here weren&#39;t born here. They study, they graduate, and the many industries in our area attract them - drawing them to settle nearby. And you weren&#39;t born here, but you&#39;re a figure that many people know, esteem, and respect. You are the archetype of the new citizen, and that could be very useful to us.&quot;</p>
<p>But I didn&#39;t even live there. What were they asking me? I didn&#39;t understand - at first. But I sensed something strange in their request. It was time to clarify, but…</p>
<p>&quot;It doesn&#39;t matter which political alignment you choose. These gentlemen are the local representatives of the two major parties, and both would be delighted to have you on board. The choice should be ideological, but try to be pragmatic. After all, both sides have their spheres of influence, and you won&#39;t lack for work, in the position you&#39;ll hold. People will seek you out because you think like them. And for us, a new face would be gold, in this moment of political disaffection.&quot;</p>
<p>My smile turned, abruptly, to paralysis. I tried to speak, but…</p>
<p>&quot;You can always change your mind and switch to the other side. Some have done it, and although it may seem absurd, some voters appreciate someone who changes their mind - they see it as a human quality, like their own.&quot;</p>
<p>I interrupted him.</p>
<p>&quot;Are you asking me to stand for election, in either of the two parties? I have no experience. No competence in the matter. Shouldn&#39;t I start from the bottom first?&quot;</p>
<p>His smile became almost paternal, like the other two:</p>
<p>&quot;My dear boy, it doesn&#39;t matter. You&#39;ll learn. Besides, people don&#39;t want experience - experience makes you cautious, and caution is boring. They want someone young, resolute, convincing. Tell them what they like to hear, with confidence. That will be more than enough. In the meantime, party dynamics count more than individual ideas.&quot; And their smiles turned into a laugh. Genuine, probably. Sardonic, to my eyes.</p>
<p>I froze, and decided to put their same smile back on.</p>
<p>&quot;Thank you for the offer and for the trust. Without doubt, it&#39;s interesting. But I need to think about it - you must give me time. I would never have expected this; it wasn&#39;t in my plans. I need to reflect.&quot;</p>
<p>&quot;Of course!&quot; replied Stan (of Stan&#39;s Previously Owned Vessels). &quot;Take all the time you want - we&#39;re always here. Just give us a sign and we&#39;ll always be ready to meet and give you all the details you need.&quot;</p>
<p>As soon as I stepped outside the building, I quickened my pace toward the Smart. The snow was bothering me now and I brushed it from my face with sharp, impatient movements. The mound of snow was still there, and so was my Smart. I accelerated to build some momentum and, without even realising it, went into a slight spin. I shifted the lever to D and pulled away, sharply.</p>
<p>I reached home in some indefinite stretch of time, my mind empty. I left the Smart outside and went upstairs, almost slamming the door to make sure it wouldn&#39;t freeze shut. I opened the fridge - full of everything - but closed it thinking: &quot;Pizza.&quot; I went out again, this time on foot, to pick one up. A few words with someone, I thought, would do me good.</p>
<p>&quot;The usual, thanks.&quot; Luca looked at me, probably thinking I had got out of bed on the wrong side, and said nothing more. The television, in the background, was showing the news. At one point an important national politician appeared, charming the journalists with their own words.</p>
<p>&quot;Crooks. Phonies. Hypocrites. Only clinging to their seats, that&#39;s all they are&quot; - I whispered in my mind. But, perhaps, not only in my mind. 
Luca looked at me, while with practised, expert gestures he stretched out my pizza, and said with a smile: &quot;Only just worked that out, have you?&quot;</p>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 27 Mar 2026 07:50:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <atom:updated>2026-03-27T07:50:00.000Z</atom:updated>
      <author>stefano@dragas.it (Stefano Marinelli)</author>
      <dc:creator>Stefano Marinelli</dc:creator>
      <category>reflections</category>
      <category>memories</category>
      <category>italy</category>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>The Scent of Denial</title>
      <link>https://my-notes.dragas.net/2026/03/21/the-scent-of-denial/</link>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">https://my-notes.dragas.net/2026/03/21/the-scent-of-denial/</guid>
      <description><![CDATA[An anonymous white bottle in a 2001 photo brings back the sharp smell of adolescence -  of treatments, hidden shame, and the night I looked in the mirror and finally saw what everyone else already had.]]></description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>My wife&#39;s expression was distant. It was clear she had no interest whatsoever in seeing a photo from 2001, in which I was showing off a corner of my university bedroom, just to point out where I had placed my green iMac, bought second-hand at a very high price. But out of affection, she encouraged me and waited patiently.</p>
<p>When I found the photo, my attention shifted to a secondary detail: that anonymous white bottle, barely visible on one side. And I could smell it again - that sharp, acrid smell, now unbearable to me, that had followed me for a very long time.</p>
<p>I had just turned sixteen when my mother started saying she was finding my hair on the pillow. She was worried, and so was my father. Honestly - I had so much of it, it could only have been their obsession. It was beautiful, glossy, thick. I liked it, even though I kept it short for convenience. I was doing a lot of sport, so it made sense to keep it practical. But given everything we had been through in the years before, I didn&#39;t feel like arguing, so I simply acknowledged their obsession and went along with it. I showed no concern whatsoever - I washed it often, it all seemed firmly in place - but if it meant putting their minds at rest, I was willing to go along with their suggestions. The first of which was a visit to a dermatologist friend of the family.
He was professional and kind and, as I expected, said I had a great deal of hair. But who knows - stress, genetics - it would be wise to act early, to prevent things from becoming a problem. Doctors. There was an entire line of products: incredibly foul-smelling ampoules to apply in the evening, designed to stimulate the hair follicles. So foul-smelling that after applying them, I had to sit still for around half an hour with a towel over my shoulders, and the pillowcase needed changing every two days because of the stains and the smell. Then in the morning, my hair had to be washed with that shampoo. A shampoo in a plain white bottle, anonymous. Expensive, but not outrageously so - the kind sold in pharmacies. The good news was that my hair really was glossy and beautiful. The bad news was that the whole thing had become a kind of slavery, and the smell of the ampoules lingered even after washing. At best, it mixed with the shampoo, creating something different. After a few months, I stopped noticing.</p>
<p>Time passed, and the visits, the ampoules, the washing continued. I looked at myself and genuinely didn&#39;t understand why any of this was necessary. But after what had happened, I thought it was something that reassured them, so I kept enduring it, going along with it. Of course I was irritated. It was a form of slavery. And that smell, which I had grown somewhat used to, was still different from the scent I would have wanted. But I put up with it, covering it by wearing a great deal of cologne and aftershave. My friends never said anything - in fact, they said I always smelled clean. They teased me gently, saying I smelled &quot;too good&quot; for a teenager, but in a positive way. I will be grateful to them for that for the rest of my life.</p>
<p>I was seventeen and in the changing room at school, after PE. That day I&#39;d finished getting dressed before the others and had gone out to the entrance area. Everyone would gradually arrive there, including the girls from my class, so we could organise ourselves for the next lesson. That day, as class representative, I&#39;d been tasked with asking the teacher to go over a topic again - a clever technique to try to avoid any kind of oral test - but I needed to coordinate with my co-representative, so we could make the request together and give it more weight. The changing rooms were at opposite ends - the boys&#39; was at the far end of the corridor, the girls&#39; had two doors but was close to where I was standing. One of the doors had been left open, so you could hear what was being said inside. Out of habit, I wasn&#39;t deliberately listening, but when I heard my name, curiosity got the better of reason - and of the lesson I already knew clearly at seventeen: sometimes it&#39;s better not to know.</p>
<p>A voice - one I didn&#39;t identify in that moment - said cheerfully: &quot;...he can&#39;t cover that incredible stench of whatever it is he has on him. He puts on so much cologne, but it&#39;s pathetic because the smell still wins.&quot; And a general laugh broke out.
My brain refused to identify that voice, or the laughter that followed. When someone stabs you in the back, you often don&#39;t want to know who is driving the knife in. It would hurt so much more.</p>
<p>The door opened and the first of the girls came out of the changing room. When she saw me standing there, and realised the other door had been left open, she froze. I decided to pretend nothing had happened, that I had heard nothing, and with a smile I asked if my co-representative was ready, as we needed to coordinate. Escaping her discomfort, she replied with half a smile: &quot;Yes, she&#39;s coming. Bye!&quot;</p>
<p>I never spoke about it to anyone.</p>
<p>When I got home, I made a decision: I would never put those ampoules on my head again. At most, I would keep using the shampoo. But the ampoules - no. I didn&#39;t explain why. I didn&#39;t want them to feel guilty about any of it. After all, even if in their own way, they were doing it for my good. And yet I felt trapped - without knowing how to get out. We agreed I would finish the current box of ampoules - there were still a few months&#39; worth left - and then we wouldn&#39;t buy more. They were very expensive, but according to my parents, they were working. &quot;Expensive, this placebo&quot;, I thought - and not just in financial terms.</p>
<p>A few months later came one of the highlights of the year: a Carnival party, organised by an important local association, where you could attend either in costume or well-dressed - jacket and tie - and only by invitation. I always had an invitation, thanks to my friends, and I looked forward to it every year. This time, though, everything was different: in the meantime I had turned eighteen and got my driving licence. When I got dressed at home, I looked in the mirror and liked what I saw. I hadn&#39;t used the ampoules for two days - to avoid the smell - and my hair was glossy and bright.</p>
<p>That evening I arrived by car and brought a friend along, who I signed in with me. A girl who was and would remain only a friend - but that evening, I felt genuinely good about myself. I was independent - my own car! I arrived with a beautiful girl - just a friend, of course, but all of it made me feel good - and I felt adult, accepted. Respected.
There was dinner, then the after-dinner - the moment when they played music for our generation and people danced. It was the late nineties, disco music still had a pulse, even if its final stages, while we were in full bloom. At a certain point I got thirsty, took a break, went for a glass of water. I decided to stop by the bathroom to rinse my face and wash off the sweat. As I splashed water on my face, I was thinking about how wonderful the evening was, how marvellous it was to be growing up and becoming an adult. 
I looked up at the mirror, smiling the smile of someone who is happy. 
I looked straight into my own eyes - bright, full of energy - and then I saw something: above those eyes, my hair was thin. At the front, and on top. I tried moving it a little - maybe the sweat had flattened it? - but nothing changed. I froze.</p>
<p>A close friend walked into the bathroom. I looked at him. He looked at me. A moment - just a moment - and then he gave a small nod, the kind that doesn&#39;t need words. I pushed all the negative emotions back down, overwhelmed by the positive ones. This was me. This was really me. I ran a hand through my hair to put it back in order, and walked back into the ballroom, smiling, with an enormous sense of relief.
I would carry on with the ampoules and that shampoo in its anonymous white bottle for years more.</p>
<p>Until life, like the bottle, came into colour.</p>
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      <pubDate>Sat, 21 Mar 2026 07:45:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <atom:updated>2026-03-21T07:45:00.000Z</atom:updated>
      <author>stefano@dragas.it (Stefano Marinelli)</author>
      <dc:creator>Stefano Marinelli</dc:creator>
      <category>reflections</category>
      <category>memories</category>
      <category>health</category>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>The Scent of the City</title>
      <link>https://my-notes.dragas.net/2026/03/13/the-scent-of-the-city/</link>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">https://my-notes.dragas.net/2026/03/13/the-scent-of-the-city/</guid>
      <description><![CDATA[A morning walk through Ferrara becomes a journey through scent and memory - from London coffee to a grandmother&apos;s market, from ancient hospital corridors to the unmistakable perfume of fresh bread.]]></description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Morning errands in the city centre have a bittersweet flavour. The need to park far away brings a long walk which, depending on the day, can be either a punishment or a tonic.</p>
<p>This morning fell at that particular hour - the moment when every city releases its own scent. Like nature in spring, every city gives its best when the morning&#39;s activities begin to stir. Like when a curtain rises: the real theatre begins. The one where, in London, you could smell the Starbucks coffee everyone carried to the office. Too hot to consume on the go, scalding at just the right temperature to fill the air, otherwise already saturated with the smell of kebab. The one where, in Paris, you smell croissants and pain au chocolat, while the traffic on the Champs-Élysées reminds you that frenzy and poetry travel side by side, there. The one where, when I went to the market with my grandmother, it meant I would soon be eating my corn focaccia - the reward for... having eaten. Because, back then, getting me to eat was difficult, and they tried everything just to stop me wasting away.</p>
<p>And crossing Corso della Giovecca, you catch the stately, ancient scent of the old hospital. A place of care, respect, and reverence - the way hospitals were once regarded. Different and distant from the smell of disinfectant in the new one. Brighter, certainly. Precisely - more sterile. Smells that are familiar to me - like when I used to visit my parents at work, in a hospital too, but hundreds of kilometres from here. Yet the sensations remain the same.</p>
<p>The Palazzina Marfisa d&#39;Este opens its ancient door and, from within, that unmistakable scent of old walls, mingled with the perfume of the flowers in its garden and freshly cut grass. And then the bars - from which drifts the aroma of espresso, typical of Italian bars - and the older the barista, the further back in time that scent carries you. The many buildings, at that hour, see their occupants stepping out to reach their destinations. Peeking inside, you glimpse damp courtyards, well-kept gardens, car parks. Or heaps of useless clutter, mixed with mould and weeds. Bicycles - oh, so many of them - everywhere. And each one emits its own perfume, its own smell. As people reach their destinations, these places come alive, and from their freshly reopened doors comes the scent of that building&#39;s era: the ancient ones smell of damp, almost of mould - but a precious, ancient mould. The merely old ones carry the typical smell of their era. For someone like me who has already lived through a few decades, these scents are somehow linked to memories of my own life, lived in buildings of that period. The modern ones, by contrast, smell of newness, of the future. Perhaps a little sterile, but clean.</p>
<p>Arriving in the main square, the distance between the buildings frees the air, and you breathe in history, antiquity. The many university students, sitting at tables talking about their insurmountable problems - love affairs, exams, accommodation - carry the mind forward, connecting past to future. Speaking of the present. And the scent is tied to whichever drink is fashionable at the moment, always surrounded by the unmistakable aroma of cappuccino. I&#39;m not a cappuccino lover, but that scent takes me back to my university years. Then as now, in Bologna, I liked walking to lectures. Three and a half kilometres through the city centre, crossing streets full of bars, trattorias, hotels, hostels. Flats of young students stumbling out of their doors, still half-asleep, their faces still bearing the marks of the long night before. Like the nights I spent with my flatmates - sometimes until four in the morning - sitting on chairs, laughing, joking, chatting, talking about everything and nothing. Dreaming of the life we - hoped - we would have.</p>
<p>But the scent that envelops Ferrara in the morning is mainly one: bread. The coppietta, but not only. Every kind of bread, expertly prepared by artisans or bakeries that still contribute to the beauty of the landscape with an unmistakable, unique perfume. Bread that I remember, as a child, on my aunt&#39;s table. She wasn&#39;t from Ferrara, but she loved that kind of bread all the same. I liked it, yes, but it was... how to put it... exotic. It was the scent of the trip to my aunt and uncle&#39;s house, which I loved so much. Also because my uncle had a PC - which I didn&#39;t yet understand, except that the files I could run were the ones marked .com, .bat, or .exe - and it looked so professional!</p>
<p>Then, as the hours pass, the scents shift to the residential streets, which, with windows open, enrich the air with the aroma of ragù - each one different, mind you! - prepared by the person who lives in those places, following the ancient recipe of their mothers, grandmothers, great-grandmothers, in a ritual that remains unchanged despite the passing of time. Just as my grandmother used to do. Just as my mother does. As I do myself.</p>
<p>When evening falls, the scents change. The aroma of cappuccino transforms into spritz. That of bread becomes pizza. That of ragù turns into roast. Even Marfisa d&#39;Este changes its scent, because the open windows and the coming and going of people have altered its atmosphere. And when people return to their homes, they imbue the buildings with a different aroma. All day long, they will have turned on air conditioners, opened windows, set out fragrances. But, all at once, they return to silence. And the silence, in the night, will restore their dignity and their original character. Because people, with time, come and go. They appear and they vanish. But the scent of the city - that remains.</p>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 13 Mar 2026 16:30:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <atom:updated>2026-03-13T16:30:00.000Z</atom:updated>
      <author>stefano@dragas.it (Stefano Marinelli)</author>
      <dc:creator>Stefano Marinelli</dc:creator>
      <category>reflections</category>
      <category>memories</category>
      <category>family</category>
      <category>italy</category>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>The Scent of Freedom</title>
      <link>https://my-notes.dragas.net/2026/03/02/the-scent-of-freedom/</link>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">https://my-notes.dragas.net/2026/03/02/the-scent-of-freedom/</guid>
      <description><![CDATA[A rubber keychain shaped like a foot, a Piaggio Zip, and the sweet, terrifying taste of independence.]]></description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I was staring at the rubber keychain, shaped like a big foot. I was bursting with anticipation. The next morning, weather permitting, I would go to school on my scooter. On my scooter. My &quot;Zippo&quot; - that’s what I called it because it was a Piaggio Zip - which had been sitting there for years, waiting for this moment. That evening, I told my grandfather that no, he wouldn&#39;t be driving me to school the next morning. &quot;But it might rain&quot;, he remarked, just to make me give up. I didn&#39;t care about his &quot;adjusted&quot; weather forecasts. I was going to get on Zippo. That night, I barely slept. It was September 1996, and the moment had arrived. <em>That moment</em>.</p>
<p>The next morning, my friend pulled up under my house and honked. It was time to go. I grabbed the keys and, instinctively, brought the keychain to my nose. I smelled the scent - that specific smell of rubber that, from that moment on, would be, for me, the scent of freedom.</p>
<p>Wearing my full-face helmet, I was terrified. But my friend was with me, on his trusty 60s Vespa, to escort me. I nodded, he took off. I followed. The smell inside the new helmet was strong, and the promise I had made to my parents was clear: I would get a license to drive any motorcycle by taking proper driving school courses. Only on those conditions would they allow me to keep riding my Zippo. Conditions I found decidedly acceptable.</p>
<p>During my first trip, I thought about my grandfathers. The one at home, disappointed to have &quot;lost&quot; his taxi driver role, and the other one, who had died two years earlier, who had given me the scooter and the helmet. And I felt lucky. Fear gave way to satisfaction. A kid left home. A young man arrived at school that morning.</p>
<p>When I arrived at school, I flew to my classroom. I walked in and, as per tradition, placed Zippo’s key on the teacher&#39;s desk. My classmates cheered and congratulated me. Another one of us had crossed that milestone of life.</p>
<p>That sense of freedom and growth changed me. I started to feel different. To carry myself more securely. To have greater awareness, and this improved my social relationships, my self-esteem, my perspectives.</p>
<p>Then came a day of frost. One of the few, at those latitudes. My grandfather warned me: &quot;Be careful - it&#39;s going to freeze tomorrow morning&quot;. I didn&#39;t listen to him. When my friend came by, we set off in a line, as usual. At the curve of the bridge, I saw him skid slightly, but before I could process it... <strong>boom</strong>, I was on the ground. The speed was low, so I didn&#39;t get hurt, but I damaged Zippo. My friend turned around and burst out laughing. I was more disappointed than in pain, and I decided to go back home. Not for the dirty jeans. Not for the pain. For the shame.</p>
<p>The next day, at 7:30, my grandfather was waiting for me proudly in his blue Fiat 131. That regained role had rejuvenated him by five years. The same years I felt I had lost the moment I admitted to myself I didn&#39;t want to try that road again. So the following day, I decided to try again, and on that fateful bridge, I managed to keep my Zippo upright. Arriving triumphantly near the school, I realized there was a cluster of young people right at the street&#39;s curve: there was another sheet of ice, and as they arrived, they slipped and fell. One by one, almost all of them. I realized it in time and got off before the curve. Instinctively, I started signaling from the road to slow down. Some followed my advice. Others decided to kiss the asphalt. Maybe it served as a lesson to them. Or maybe not.</p>
<p>January arrived, and I was at driving school. I liked the lessons, and right after, I would go to my tennis practice, not far from there. All on my own. That afternoon, however, tennis lessons were suspended: heavy rain was forecast, and the courts, at river level, would almost certainly flood. When the driving lesson ended, the heavens had opened. I waited two minutes and got on the scooter anyway.
My mother, worried, called the driving school. She asked them to stop me, saying she would come by car, but the secretary looked out and saw neither me nor my Zippo. At that instant, I opened the front door: my mother burst out laughing. It looked like I had just stepped out of a bathtub, leaving rivers of water behind me. &quot;Rain is not a problem&quot;, I repeated. &quot;Freedom cannot be contained by a little water&quot;, I thought.</p>
<p>In May, a good opportunity arrived: my father was buying a Vespa ET4 125, and they had made him a good offer for another scooter - bigger, modern, fashionable. A Gilera Runner. I accepted willingly; I would have one of the trendiest scooters, and I didn&#39;t mind that. But I knew I would miss my Zippo, so on the day of the handover, I decided to make a short video, immortalizing all the details I had grown attached to. I still have that video, with the faded colors of a VHS recorded in a hurry in a garage. I took off the keychain and decided to keep it as a souvenir. And the helmet would stay with me, of course. Along with the hair I was starting to find inside it, even if I wasn&#39;t paying attention to it.
It didn&#39;t take many hours to realize I had made a monstrous mistake, because Zippo was small and light, maneuverable. This new one might have been fashionable, yes, but decidedly too high and uncomfortable for me. But that is another story.</p>
<p>Years later, I was already in Bologna. I had another &quot;Zippo&quot; - which I adored - and the same helmet. One evening I went to the cinema, in the center, and coming out I found a surprise: they had forced open the compartment under the seat and stolen my helmet. That helmet, the only remaining part of my grandfather&#39;s gift. Old, smelly by now, but it was my helmet. My reaction was very, very negative. To the point that when I got home, a friend and housemate tried to calm me down by downplaying it, reminding me that there was probably more hair inside that helmet than on my head. He was good. I was not. I lashed out verbally, almost insulting him, even though he remained calm until the end and let me vent. Then I told him the story of the helmet, and he lowered his gaze and, in a friendly way, patted me on the shoulder. I probably still owe him an apology for that night, if he remembers it. He probably forgot it many, many years ago.</p>
<p>From time to time, when I am at my parents&#39; house, I open my old memory drawer. There are many of my things - many from that very period - and last time I found the &quot;big foot&quot;. Faded, hardened by 30 years. Instinctively, I bring it to my nose again. And I still smell, intact, the scent of freedom.</p>
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      <pubDate>Mon, 02 Mar 2026 09:45:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <atom:updated>2026-03-02T09:45:00.000Z</atom:updated>
      <author>stefano@dragas.it (Stefano Marinelli)</author>
      <dc:creator>Stefano Marinelli</dc:creator>
      <category>memories</category>
      <category>freedom</category>
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