A series of short stories investigating the phobias that accompany us throughout our lives, sometimes more than relatives. It was written to laugh and think, hoping that there is no one who is afraid to laugh or think. Since the days of the boogeyman, says the actress, every year a new subject has been produced that is supposed to make us afraid: “When I was a child one had to be afraid of Chernobyl, then Mad Cow and arsenic in the water. After that, a long time later, immigrants came, but now no one care about them anymore because there is the virus.” In short, it is also because of the global climate of terror if we incur personalized phobias: from spiders to snakes, from airplanes to bacteria that might attack us at bar tables, from high water to phobia toward men and women with whom we might reproduce.
Who among us has not said at least once, “Sorry, it’s just that I have a phobia.”