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This is my space, where experience meets the will to start over.
This is my space, where experience meets the will to start over.

The first step is knowing where you want to go.

P4Y – Step 52 – How many people do you know who give even before being asked?

Posted on 18 Marzo 202618 Marzo 2026 By Francesco

There’s a kind of person the world often fails to recognize: the one who anticipates. The one who doesn’t wait for you to need something, because they’ve already understood what you need. Someone who acts quietly, not out of calculation, but out of a deep and sincere impulse — to see a smile, to hear “well done,” to know they made a difference.

It’s a form of love, this. Maybe the purest one. But also the most exposed.

Because when you give before being called, when you build something the other person hasn’t even noticed yet, you expose yourself to a silent risk: that what you’ve done gets postponed, minimized, ignored. That the “well done” becomes “I’ll look at it later.” That the smile you were waiting for never arrives. And in its place, you find only the weight of a disappointment you can’t even explain — because deep down, you wouldn’t know how to justify it either. After all, no one asked you for anything.

And that’s where the most insidious mechanism begins.

Year after year, situation after situation, that person stops recognizing their own value in the act itself and starts tying it to the reaction it produces in others. And when that reaction doesn’t come, they don’t ask “did the other person fail to see it,” they ask “maybe I’m the problem.” Slowly, that strength — that extraordinary ability to perceive, anticipate, care — stops being seen as a quality. It becomes a flaw to correct, a vulnerability to hide.

Meanwhile, on the other side, there are those who take. Not necessarily out of malice — often simply because they’ve learned that the world revolves around them. Because no one ever challenged that idea. Because there was always someone ready to anticipate them.

And so a silent, brutal dynamic forms: those who think of others stop thinking of themselves. Those who think only of themselves never start thinking of others.

The result? One grows in selfishness, the other shrinks into invisibility.

Three months late on a promise. Five months without acknowledgment. A help offered that gets returned with “maybe it wasn’t needed,” or worse, “you misunderstood.” At that point it’s no longer disappointment — it’s something subtler and more painful: the habit of disappointment. That stage where you feel the caresses, but nothing warms you anymore, because you already knew they wouldn’t be what you needed.

The problem isn’t giving. Giving is beautiful, almost rare. The problem is disappearing while doing it. Those who always give and never learn to receive — or to demand — aren’t loving others more. They’re loving themselves less.

Before anticipating someone’s need, pause for a moment and ask yourself: is anyone anticipating mine? If the answer is no, don’t stop being who you are — but start choosing where to place that energy. Not everything deserves the best version of you. And you deserve people who can notice you, even before you ask.

Just to say. CJJ


P4Y – Step 52 – Quante persone conosci che danno prima ancora che gli venga chiesto?

C’è un tipo di persona che il mondo spesso non sa riconoscere: quella che anticipa. Quella che non aspetta che tu abbia bisogno, perché ha già capito cosa ti serve. Che agisce nell’ombra, non per calcolo, ma per un bisogno profondo e sincero — vedere un sorriso, sentirsi dire “bravo”, sapere di aver fatto la differenza.

È una forma di amore, questa. Forse la più pura. Ma è anche la più esposta.

Perché quando dai senza essere stato chiamato, quando costruisci qualcosa che l’altro non ha ancora visto, ti esponi a un rischio silenzioso: che quello che hai fatto venga rimandato, minimizzato, ignorato. Che il “bravo” diventi un “poi lo guardo”. Che il sorriso che aspettavi non arrivi mai. E al suo posto, trovi solo il peso di una delusione che non hai parole per spiegare, perché in fondo nemmeno tu capiresti come giustificarla — dopotutto, nessuno ti aveva chiesto niente.

Ed è qui che scatta il meccanismo più subdolo.

Anno dopo anno, situazione dopo situazione, quella persona inizia a non riconoscere più il proprio valore nel gesto che compie, ma nell’effetto che produce sugli altri. E quando quell’effetto non arriva, non si chiede “l’altro non ha saputo vedere”, si chiede “forse sono io il problema.” Pian piano, quella forza — quella capacità straordinaria di percepire, anticipare, prendersi cura — smette di essere vista come una qualità. Diventa un difetto da correggere, una fragilità da nascondere.

Nel frattempo, dall’altra parte, c’è chi sottrae. Non necessariamente per cattiveria — spesso semplicemente perché ha imparato che il mondo gira intorno a lui. Perché nessuno gliel’ha mai fatto mettere in discussione. Perché c’era sempre qualcuno pronto ad anticiparlo.

E così si crea una dinamica silenziosa e feroce: chi pensa agli altri, smette di pensare a sé. Chi pensa a sé, non inizia mai a pensare agli altri.

Il risultato? Uno cresce nell’egoismo, l’altro si restringe nell’invisibilità.

Tre mesi di ritardo su una promessa su cinque, un sentiero gia percorso poco fa e tutto senza un riconoscimento. Un aiuto offerto che viene restituito con un “forse non serviva” o peggio ancora con un “non hai capito bene.” A quel punto non è più delusione — è qualcosa di più sottile e più doloroso: l’abitudine alla delusione. Quella fase in cui le carezze le senti, ma non ti scalda più niente, perché sapevi già che non sarebbero state quello di cui avevi bisogno.

Il problema non è dare. Dare è un atto bellissimo, quasi raro. Il problema è smettere di esistere mentre lo si fa. Chi dà sempre e non impara a ricevere — o a pretendere — non sta amando gli altri di più. Sta amando sé stesso di meno.

Prima di anticipare il bisogno di qualcuno, fermati un secondo e chiediti: qualcuno sta anticipando il mio? Se la risposta è no, non smettere di essere chi sei — ma inizia a scegliere dove mettere quella energia. Non tutto merita la versione migliore di te. E tu meriti persone che sappiano accorgersi di te, prima ancora che glielo chiedi.

Cosi. Per dire. CJJ

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Francesco

My name is Francesco Boschi, originally from Italy and currently based in the United States. For over twenty years, I’ve worked as a manager and consultant across diverse sectors — from education and cultural institutions to the food industry — developing skills in operational management, strategic consulting, and complex problem-solving. In recent years, I’ve combined this experience with a strong passion for software development, creating custom tools designed to simplify workflows and meet real business needs.

Relocating to the U.S. marks the beginning of a new chapter: a personal and professional decision driven by the desire to be close to my son and to embrace new challenges in a different environment. Today, my goal is to turn my experience into meaningful solutions, blending strategic vision with technical expertise to help people and organizations work more effectively.

I enjoy moving between different worlds, adapting tools and approaches to people and contexts. I bring leadership, flexibility, attention to detail, analytical thinking, and a strong problem-solving mindset — along with a deep curiosity to learn and grow. Above all, I believe in sharing: I’m always eager to offer my experience to support the growth of others.

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P4Y – Step 17 – The Invisible Age: When Time Plays Hide and Seek with Talent

Posted on 27 Luglio 202527 Luglio 2025

There are moments when you look in the mirror and don’t quite know where you fit.You’re not young enough to seem “promising,” nor old enough to be considered “a legend.”And yet, you’ve weathered storms, built and rebuilt, learned to read silence.But the world, sometimes, seems to want something else: naïve…

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P4Y – Step 48 – February 22, 2026, the day that changes my life.

Posted on 23 Febbraio 202623 Febbraio 2026

Italiano:
Un uomo guarda il riflesso del sole sull’acqua di un lago in una fredda domenica di febbraio. Intorno a lui, bambini che corrono, nonne che li seguono con lo sguardo. Poi si accorge che suo figlio non c’è più tra la folla. Lo cerca con gli occhi e lo vede in lontananza, avvolto in un mantello completamente assorto in un momento che non lo riguarda. In quell’istante capisce che per suo figlio è iniziato qualcosa di nuovo, una vita che non avrà più lui al centro. Sente il peso di tutti i sacrifici, di tutte le assenze, di tutte le battaglie combattute da solo. Accanto a lui, idealmente, una sedia vuota. Nel petto, un dolore dolce e profondo. Il sole continua a brillare sull’acqua.

English:
A man watches the sun reflecting on the water of a lake on a cold Sunday in February. Around him, children running, grandmothers watching over them. Then he notices his son is no longer among the crowd. He looks for him and sees him in the distance, wrapped in a cloak completely absorbed in a moment that doesn’t involve him. In that instant, he understands that something new has begun for his son, a life that will no longer have him at its center. He feels the weight of all the sacrifices, all the absences, all the battles fought alone. Beside him, ideally, an empty chair. In his chest, a sweet and deep pain. The sun keeps shining on the water.

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P4Y Step 32 – Letters in the Wind

Posted on 12 Settembre 202512 Settembre 2025

A heartfelt reflection on long-distance love—its fragility, misunderstandings, and the quiet strength it takes to keep two hearts close even when the roads drift apart.

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