Imagine more options
When the path is unclear, imagining different possibilities can reveal choices that were hidden before.
How futures literacy helps people turn uncertainty into possibility
How you find your way through unfamiliar systems, choices, and routes.
How your experience becomes understandable to other people.
Notice where this story points to a next step in your own context.
Browse related storiesIn this Chapter One Bennu conversation, Ben speaks with Francesca Ballini about futures literacy, intercultural experience, sustainability, and the skills people need when the path ahead is not clear. The conversation moves from culture shock and living abroad into a deeper reflection on how people imagine the future and use that imagination in the present.
Francesca shares how curiosity, resilience, language learning, cultural adaptation, and future thinking can help people move through uncertainty with more confidence. She also connects futures literacy with intercultural competence and sustainability as part of a wider practice of global citizenship.
Read through the Flux Forward Activation lens, this is a Navigation episode: uncertainty becomes easier to move through when people can imagine more than one possible future and stay open to different routes forward.
A Bennu conversation about the human story behind a Flux Forward signal.
Open LinkedIn profileNotice where this story points to a next step in your own context.
Bennu holds the story. Flux Forward helps turn it into a clearer next step.
How you find your way through unfamiliar systems, choices, and routes.
How your experience becomes understandable to other people.
How futures literacy helps people turn uncertainty into possibility
Look for one conversation, one clearer explanation, or one better example that would make the next step easier to act on.
This episode is about meeting uncertainty with imagination instead of fear alone. Francesca shows how exploring possible futures can help people see choices in the present.
When the path is unclear, imagining different possibilities can reveal choices that were hidden before.
Uncertainty does not need to stop action if it becomes a space for learning and adjustment.
Living with difference can build patience, perspective, and a wider sense of what is possible.
Resilience grows when people can adapt without pretending that change is easy.
Can uncertainty become a place to explore, rather than only a problem to solve?
This conversation is about learning to move when the future is not fixed. Francesca Ballini brings together intercultural experience, sustainability, and futures literacy to show how uncertainty can become a space for imagination rather than only a source of fear. The episode is not about predicting what will happen. It is about building the capacity to see more possibilities, adapt to new contexts, and act in the present with more openness.
Culture shock is part of the learning process
Francesca speaks honestly about the small and large difficulties of moving across cultures: language barriers, unfamiliar expectations, direct communication, and the discomfort of not knowing how to respond. Her point is not to avoid those moments. It is to give yourself time and grace while you learn how a new context works.
Resilience grows through small failures
The conversation shows that adaptation is not built through perfect preparation. It is built through moments where things go wrong, from misunderstanding a language to failing an essay or feeling out of place in a workplace. These experiences can be uncomfortable, but they also build confidence that you can respond, learn, and keep moving.
Futures literacy changes the way we use uncertainty
Francesca describes futures literacy as a skill: a way of bringing the future into daily life and behavior. One of the strongest ideas in the episode is that the future does not exist yet. That means there are multiple possible futures, and our imagination can help us act differently in the present.
The path is not one route
The episode challenges the idea that there is one correct path from where you are now to where you want to go. Francesca uses futures literacy to open up alternatives: if one route is blocked, another may still exist. That mindset matters for students, professionals, and anyone trying to navigate change.
Global citizenship connects the themes
Near the end of the conversation, Francesca connects intercultural competence, futures literacy, and sustainability through the idea of global citizenship. These are not separate boxes. Together, they help people live and work in a world where cultures, systems, and futures are deeply connected.
International students and early-career professionals often face uncertainty from several directions at once: a new culture, a changing job market, unfamiliar systems, and pressure to make the right decision. This episode offers a different way to relate to that uncertainty. Instead of needing one fixed plan, people can learn to imagine, observe, adapt, and keep multiple possibilities alive.
This is a Navigation episode. It shows how people find their way through unfamiliar systems by expanding the futures they can imagine and staying flexible about the routes they take.
Where are you treating the future as one fixed path, and what changes if you imagine three possible routes instead?
Start with one small step from here. Check your situation, clarify your profile, explore the wider context, or keep following the stories.