Ecco un’immagine scattata ieri, in taxi, per le strade di Yangon.

Con la correttezza e coerenza giornalistica che mi si conviene devo anche segnalare che, finora (si, son prevenuto), nessuno dei 12 passaggi in taxi in giro per la città mi ha dato alcunché da raccontare e alimentare la leggenda della sfida-imperitura quando raccatto un taxi ovunque al mondo.

Auto più che accettabili, guida misurata, traffico “accettabile” (a parte le ore di punta: “accettabile” livello di troiaio), nessuno ha pensato di approfittarsene economicamente perché son grande/grosso/pelato/ciula/straniero: tariffe “accettabili”, e notate quante volte ho usato con cautela lo stesso aggettivo per non sbilanciare un giudizio. Unica cosa, la parola “ricevuta” non ha traduzione concettuale nel riccioloso idioma locale: tutti quattrini che ci rimetto alla gloria dell’azienda che mi paga il viatico …

Roba da trasferirmi qui …..

taxi mm


Discover more from VITA VISSUTA

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

It has been more than fifty years since I began traveling across the world — and the seven seas — for work or for pleasure, always with a Leica M camera close at hand. The camera has never been an accessory; it has been a constant companion, a way of observing, remembering, and making sense of the places and people I encountered along the way. I started keeping this kind of journal some time ago, not as a diary in the traditional sense, but as a space where images and words could meet. This is not a publication driven by schedules or algorithms. At times I disappear for long stretches; then, inevitably, I return with semi-regular updates. Publishing, for me, is a mirror of my state of mind and emotions. It follows my rhythm, not the other way around. You have to take it exactly as it comes. Every photograph you see here is mine. They are fragments of a life spent moving, looking, and waiting for moments to reveal themselves — often quietly, sometimes unexpectedly. This blog is not about destinations, but about presence. About what remains when the journey slows down and the shutter finally clicks.

2 Comment on “Richiesto a furor di popolo

Leave a Reply to Maurizio VagnozziCancel reply

Discover more from VITA VISSUTA

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading

Discover more from VITA VISSUTA

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading