23/04/2025
We prepared and tested the training that each partner would then carry out in their own country in Italy. On the occasion of World Volunteer Day, Relight training activities were hosted and interacted with those proposed by Cellnex for its employees in the spirit of synergy between projects.
That morning, Irene and I left early to reach the headquarters and prepare the material for the laboratory. There was an air of expectation that accompanied us as we carefully arranged everything. We were focused on welcoming those 40 people who, for the first time or almost, would find themselves faced with a new, creative experience, far from the routine of their daily work.
Among the participants were Cellnex employees and 20 people from the Erasmus Relight project, gathered for a day of volunteering. It was surprising to observe them and read in their eyes curiosity, confusion, but also a timid enthusiasm. They wondered: "What use will all this have?"
The Mandala: A Circle of Emotions
We explained that they would create a mandala (a word that means circle). In many cultures, the mandala is a meditative act, a representation of one's internal structure: vibrations, colors, cyclicity. With background music and an invitation to listen internally, everyone began to create, focusing on their own creative process.
At first it might have seemed like a simple game: hands experimenting with shapes, colors, textures. But soon, something changed. Some became emotional while creating, almost surprised by what emerged inside them. The questions came spontaneously, as if they were discovering a deeper meaning.
Once the mandalas were completed, we asked everyone to give a title to their work and, if they wanted, to share their feelings and emotions. They were amazed to realize how an apparently simple activity had aroused such intense reactions in them.
In the second phase, the mandalas were placed on the floor, divided into two groups. In a circle, we observed the whole and asked: "Do you want to change something? Add, move, connect?"
We proposed something unexpected and stimulating: contamination, "Take some material and use it to unite the mandalas."
The two groups created two collective mandalas, each with its own story. We asked them what it meant to them to overcome their own boundaries, to let others intervene in their creation. Some spoke of difficulties, of feeling "invaded", others saw the mandala as a metaphor for the moment they were experiencing.
Finally, the final challenge: "Find a way to unite the two mandalas into one."
Even for us organizers it was surprising to see how the group reacted. One person spontaneously offered to be a "bridge" between the two circles, a gesture that colleagues recognized as symbolic even in their daily work.
That workshop was more than an activity: it was a journey within oneself and towards others. An experience that showed how, sometimes, a carefully drawn circle, a shared gesture, is enough to discover unexpected connections.
And in the end, while we were looking at the one large mandala created by everyone, we understood that the true synergy was there: in the shared emotions, in the barriers overcome, in the beauty of a journey made together.
This activity proposed and conducted by the FacilitAscolto Association is perfectly in line with self-leadership skills, usable on any occasion and also at work to promote coexistence, cooperation and integration.