21/02/2026
On this 21st day of February, as the world observes the International Tourist Guide Day, one might be tempted to indulge in the ritualistic pleasantries customary to commemorative occasions.
Yet today seems to invite something richer, something more contemplative — perhaps even something gently irreverent.
For ours is a profession too often misunderstood, politely admired, and quietly taken for granted.
In an age enamored with algorithms, automation, and the ceaseless promise of frictionless efficiency, there appears to be a growing fascination — particularly among those who govern, strategize, and calculate — with the notion that human presence itself might be regarded as an inconvenient variable.
After all, why rely on fallible, breathing, thinking individuals when one may deploy tireless machines, immaculate in memory, obedient in function, and blissfully devoid of personality?
The vision is alluring, no doubt. Robots do not tire. Robots do not complain. Robots do not require empathy, patience, improvisation, or that most unpredictable of human faculties: heart.
And yet.
Guiding is not merely the recitation of facts, nor the mechanical transmission of dates, names, and architectural descriptions.
It is an intricate choreography of knowledge and intuition, of scholarship and sensitivity. It is the delicate art of reading a room, sensing curiosity, kindling wonder, dissolving confusion, navigating moods, bridging cultures, and transforming spaces into stories.
Our work is woven from care — the attentive awareness of those who entrust us with their time, their expectations, their fleeting moments of discovery.
It is sustained by passion — that restless enthusiasm that no database can replicate. It thrives on humanity — the capacity to connect, to laugh, to adapt, to understand the unspoken. It is animated by love — love for history, for heritage, for beauty, for the subtle dialogue between past and present.
And let us not omit a less poetic, yet profoundly honest ingredient: fatigue. Considerable fatigue.
Behind every graceful explanation, every seamless itinerary, every seemingly effortless narrative, lies preparation, study, vigilance, responsibility, and endurance. Long hours, unpredictable conditions, logistical acrobatics, and the perpetual obligation to remain not merely competent, but engaging, composed, and endlessly attentive.
There is, in truth, nothing automated about dedication.
As I mark, with gratitude and cautious optimism, the beginning of my thirty-first year of professional activity, I find myself reflecting not only on the persistence required to sustain such a path, but also on the privilege it represents. To guide is to serve as interpreter, mediator, storyteller, and companion. It is to stand at the confluence of knowledge and experience, transforming information into meaning.
No circuitry has yet mastered that alchemy.
So today, with sincerity — and perhaps a knowing smile at the grand technological ambitions of our era — I extend my warmest wishes to all local and licensed guides across the globe. To those who walk cities, monuments, landscapes, and museums with unwavering commitment; to those who transform journeys into memories; to those whose voices animate stones, streets, and centuries.
May our curiosity remain inexhaustible, our resilience unshaken, our enthusiasm undiminished.
Ad maiora!
And happy International Tourist Guide Day to all who practice this quietly extraordinary craft.