I was born in summer of the southern hemisphere, in February, 1988 near Buenos Aires, Argentina. My parents soon divorced and went on with their lives in very different ways; I grew up in two very different ‘worlds’. One world was the enormous capital city; loud, full of people, cars and later the Waldorf School. The other world was a farm with cows and horses, and a very abundant family around me (around 40 cousins!). This moving between my mother’s and my father’s world, feeling the pain of division but also the rich gift of diversity, developed questions that grew in me about the meaning to be a human being connected or disconnected to this or that particular thing. These questions developed the impulse for building a bridge (first in myself!) for these separate worlds to communicate, to listen to each other and maybe learn from each other.
This is the main thread of my life; that with time, becomes richer and more complex in each important event that I am able to experience. It developed into the question of how I do I experience being at home or being homeless, as I have lived half of my life in different countries and cities of Europe as an immigrant.
The two worlds that are striving to become one, to enrich and encounter each other, are for me the inner and the outer realities. But to really feel this longing first needs the realisation and experience, to a certain level, of the gap or abyss between them.
Out of these feelings and experiences I became a priest in The Christian Community; to be there for other people who experience both the gap, and also the longing, for developing and discovering the bridging possibilities between the human being and nature: I and you.

When I was nineteen I attended an International Youth Conference at the Goetheanum with around 500 hundred participants from all over the world. This changed the course of my life for many years in a deep sense. This can happen, so we better be careful! Of course, this profound change can happen in a bus station, sitting on the beach, or taking a shower, anywhere and anytime. But also at such a Conference as this! And it is maybe a good inner mood of courage to bring this enthusiasm and will into our hearts, so that something can change radically in our lives. Wouldn’t this be amazing if this also happens to you?!