Either you are rich or you are rock

In Italian, the phrase “O sei ricco o sei rocco” works because of the assonance between “ricco” and “rocco”. The two words differ by a single vowel, yet they evoke entirely different forms of power. The sound similarity makes the contrast sharper, almost playful, while the meaning underneath is anything but light. “Rich” (ricco) is … Read more

My Desk Is Not Messy. It Is Simply Ahead

What is perceived as chaos on a desk is often not disorder. It is a system. Not a linear system. Not an aesthetic system. But a functional one. To the outside observer, that surface cluttered with open books, overlapping notes, hastily written post-its, and objects apparently out of place seems to deny the very idea of … Read more

Hurry up and wait!

“Hurry up and wait” is one of those expressions that compresses an entire institutional culture into four words. It was widely used in the Royal Navy and later in the United States Navy to describe a familiar rhythm of military life: urgent mobilisation followed by long, immobile anticipation. Orders arrive. Everything must be done immediately. … Read more

Etc. = Etm ?

In recent times, across social networks and chats, a curious pseudo-Latin abbreviation has appeared: “etm”, used in contexts where one would normally find “etc.”. According to some, it stands for “et merda”, that is, “and shit”, placed at the end of a list to give the same flavour as the more straightforward English “and shit”, … Read more

Women possess a remarkable social talent!

(References to real, existing people are, as always, entirely intentional.) Women possess a remarkable social talent: they know how to remain silent about what truly matters and, at the same time, comment with flair on what does not matter at all.This is not inconsistency. It is information economy. When the stakes are serious — affections, … Read more

You must have the courage to do what is right …

“You must have the courage to do what is right, whatever the risk.It is the only way to live with yourself.” (Attribution uncertain; sometimes attributed to Capt. Lawrence Chambers) This quote, in its simplicity, recalls an ancient principle: moral courage is required to do what is right, even when it involves risks, pressure, or unpleasant … Read more

A fool only learns from his own mistakes…

A fool only learns from his own mistakes.The wise man learns from the mistakes of others.(Otto von Bismarck)Otto, Prince of Bismarck, Count of Bismarck-Schönhausen, Duke of Lauenburg (born Otto Eduard Leopold von Bismarck; 1815–1898) was a Prussian statesman and diplomat who oversaw the unification of Germany. Bismarck’s Realpolitik and firm governance resulted in him being … Read more

“What will remain when I am gone? I do not care.”

The French expression “Après moi, le déluge” survives because it captures a familiar human reflex with ruthless clarity. The literal translation is simple: “After me, the deluge.” Older English sometimes makes the attitude explicit:“When I am dead, the deluge can come for all I care.” In modern terms:“I will take what I want now. Whatever … Read more

The hours pass and are accounted for

“Pereunt et imputantur”“The hours pass and are accounted for.” It is a Latin expression that reminds us of the importance of not wasting time and of making it fruitful, one of the most famous phrases engraved on ancient sundials. Its meaning is clear and relentless: time does not merely flow, it accumulates on our account. … Read more

Changing strategy at the last minute

“Surprising people” is driving through a red light.“Improvising” is slamming on the brakes when the light is green. Two actions equally unpredictable, yet opposite in their wisdom. It is a joke, of course. But, as often happens, humour captures the world of work and leadership with surgical precision. In traffic, as in teams, surprising others … Read more

You are a good listener

For some time now I have often been told, “You are a good listener.”The remark surprises me every time. I have always listened, of course, but for many years I doubt I truly deserved the adjective “good”. And I do not think this new reputation comes from age, which sometimes leads people to mistake the … Read more

“Your stripes are earned in the sweat, son… but your honor is earned in the silence.”

(Anonymous source) Apart from the obvious military context, this aphorism separates effort from dignity, and achievement from character. Stripes come from action: the long hours, the discipline, the grind that nobody sees but everybody benefits from.Sweat leaves a visible trace. It is measurable. It is the world of deliverables, tasks, and results. Honour, instead, belongs … Read more

10 Subtle Signs That You May Be Ready to Retire

(Inspired by Bruce Horovitz,“10 Subtle Signs That You Are Ready to Retire”,Wall Street Journal, 19 November 2025) We always imagine a dramatic moment of revelation, a thunderbolt from above announcing: it is time.In reality, for most of us, no epiphany ever arrives.What we do receive are small messages, discreet yet insistent. Tiny yellow lights blinking … Read more

Money cannot buy happiness…

Money cannot buy happiness… but cannoli can, and you can buy those.

And this is where philosophy meets pastry-making.

Because, while it is true that happiness cannot be found on supermarket shelves, it is equally true that some simple pleasures have surprising power: they lift your mood, lighten your day and melt away accumulated tension.

Each man lives to rise or fall before the challenges set in his path

Each man lives to rise or fall before the challenges set in his path. Fate brings trials; it is reason and will that must respond.To rise is not triumph, nor is to fall disgrace.What matters is how we endure the test. And we must take care:“He who fights with monsters must be careful not to … Read more

Arguing with the biased

Today I learnt something simple and hard: when a discussion slips into a clash of identities, reason switches off.
We are no longer talking about ideas; we are defending tribes.
At that point you waste time and, worse, you risk losing the friend.

Why it happens

Bias and identity.
If an idea is glued to the ego, any argument feels like a personal attack.

Holding your ground: when ‘to break rather than bend’ is the right choice

Flexibility helps us negotiate and grow, but at times it slips into yielding and, with it, the renunciation of what defines us.

Flexibility is a means, not an end: it is useful until it touches the core of principles — truth, safety, dignity, legality. Beyond that line, to bend is not intelligence, it is abdication.

Reputation, built over years and lost in a minute, lives precisely on this boundary.

There is nothing noble in being superior to someone else

“There is nothing noble in being superior to someone else; true nobility lies in being superior to your former self.”
(Ernest Hemingway)

Ambition has a subtle talent: it pushes us to measure our worth against others, as if life were a ranking.

But true greatness does not come from outshining anyone; it comes from surpassing oneself — day after day, mistake after mistake.

A conference in Poland

Today I spoke at a conference in Poland, sharing insights from my specific field: the engineering, inspection, and maintenance of giant wind rotor blades.

Among the presentations, one particularly stood out — a talk on the 6R philosophy, a modern evolution of sustainability principles that goes far beyond the familiar “Reduce, Reuse, Recycle.”