A controversial and bitter snapshot: a boy harassing a giant Christmas bauble, tearing it off, and carrying it away. It's the image that has become symbolic of yet another episode of incivility in the historic center of Nuoro, in one of the most picturesque corners of the ancient Seuna district, on Via Le Grazie, just meters from the historic church of the same name. The owner of Panelentu, a business that has been trying for years to enhance the area through small gestures of beauty and color, recounts the incident.

The Christmas decorations—three inflatable balls positioned along the street—were intended to brighten up an elegant and historically rich setting. One of them, however, was stolen. "'There's never anything in Nuoro'... how many times have our kids, and we before them, said it over and over again?" the shopkeeper wrote in his outburst. "We need to understand in what sense there's never anything, because there are so many things to steal, for example. Three inflatable balls are one of them." These words don't hide bitterness, but they point to a deeper problem: respect for clichés and for those who try to preserve them.

"It's almost touching to see young people—grown up in the registry, but less so in spirit—carry away a bit of color that was meant to brighten up a beautiful, elegant street, sometimes made ugly by certain 'men,'" he concludes. The episode reopens the debate on the sense of belonging and collective responsibility toward urban heritage. Small gestures, like a Christmas decoration, may seem marginal, but they represent a sign of care and love for the city. When they are stolen or damaged, it's not just a shop window that's affected, but the very idea of community.

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