Schmerzhafte Offenbarung: Riccardo Simonetti bricht sein Schweigen über den Tod seines Vaters

Riccardo Simonetti

Für ihn beginnt das Jahr 2026 mit großer Schwere.Anfang Januar macht Riccardo Simonetti mit einem bewegenden Post bei Instagram öffentlich, dass sein Vater Italo unerwartet gestorben ist. Nun erklärt der TV-Star, wie er seitdem mit der Trauer umgegangen ist und was ihm geholfen hat.Riccardo Simonetti: Ich habe mich oft schuldig gefühlt, wenn…

Ein Fan will bei einem Q&A auf Instagram wissen: „Wie geht’s dir mit dem Tod deines Papas? Fand’s super wie du damit umgegangen bist.” Simoetti (33) antwortet darauf ausführlich, schreibt: „Es ist ein auf und ab. Ich muss sagen, dass es mir sehr geholfen hat, das hier mit euch zu teilen, weil ich wirklich viele Tipps und tröstende Worte zugeschickt bekommen habe, das hat mir ein bisschen den Glauben an Social Media zurück gebracht.”

Weiter erklärt der Moderator, Autor und Entertainer: „Die letzten Wochen habe ich festgestellt, dass ich mich ganz oft schuldig gefühlt habe, wenn ich mal glücklich war oder an etwas anderes gedacht habe. Und so sehr sich das Gefühl von Trauer, wie ein Schleier über jede Situation legt, so sehr sehne ich mich auch nach Ablenkung und dem Gefühl von Leichtigkeit. Ich bin die nächsten Wochen viel unterwegs und hoffe genau dieses Gefühl auf dem Weg wiederzufinden.”

Wie schwer die Trauer und wie stark die Bindung zu seinem Papa gewesen ist, wird in Riccardos Abschieds-Post Anfang Januar mehr als deutlich. Zu bewegenden Worten teilt der TV-Star mehrere Fotos, teils aus der Kindheit – eng an eng mit seinem Vater. Zeilen wie diese haben nichts an ihrer Dramatik verloren:„Eines Tages wirst du aufwachen und merken, dass du alle Gespräche mit deinem Vater geführt haben und die Worte ‘Ich liebe dich, Papa’ zum letzten Mal gesagt haben wirst.”

Related Posts

Calling all die-hard fans of Dolly Parton ✨❤️

INTRODUCTION: This isn’t just a post — it’s a roll call of gratitude, memory, and shared history. There comes a time in life when music stops being entertainment…

HE WAS ABOUT TO CANCEL THE SHOW, BUT SHE SAID: “SING FOR ME.” Vince Gill stood there, his eyes red and swollen behind his wire-rimmed glasses. Amy Grant had just gone through open-heart surgery and was nowhere near ready to return to the stage. But Vince couldn’t cancel the charity benefit; she wouldn’t let him. He chose “Go Rest High on That Mountain,” a song he swore he would only sing for those who have passed on. “Tonight, I sing this to keep someone here,” he whispered. His voice soared, piercing the darkness with raw pain. But at the heartbreaking crescendo, his voice cracked. He couldn’t hit the high note. He bowed his head in defeat. Suddenly, from the shadows behind him, a gentle, familiar harmony filled the silence. Vince whipped around, stunned. It was Amy. She walked out slowly, frail, with medical tape still visible on her hand. Vince dropped to his knees right there on the stage. In the moment their eyes met, the music didn’t just stop—it became a prayer…

In the world of Christian and Country music, Vince Gill and Amy Grant are royalty. They are the couple that makes us believe in love. But last…

“THREE MINUTES. ONE SONG. SIX DECADES OF COUNTRY HISTORY.” When the first notes of “Remember When” drifted into the room, something shifted. No announcement. No cue. People just stood up—slowly, almost instinctively. Alan Jackson didn’t rush the moment. He walked in calm, steady, like someone who had nothing to prove. His voice wasn’t loud. It didn’t need to be. It carried years. Faces softened. A few smiles turned quiet. At the 60th ACM Awards, this wasn’t about nostalgia for show. It felt like respect—for where country music came from, and why it mattered. And for a few minutes, the room wasn’t watching history. It was inside it

The Night the ACMs Felt Like Home Again: Alan Jackson’s “Remember When” and the Standing Ovation That Didn’t Feel Staged Some songs don’t begin with a drumbeat….

“AUNT DOLLY… CAN I SING WITH YOU JUST ONCE?” — AND 20,000 PEOPLE FORGOT HOW TO BREATHE. A 6-year-old boy stood at the edge of the stage. Small. Fragile. A heart support device pressed gently against his chest. He wasn’t asking for a miracle. He was waiting for a new heart. What he wanted that night was simpler. He looked up at Dolly Parton — 80 years old, a woman who has carried songs across more than six decades — and asked if he could sing with her. Just once. She could have smiled and waved. She could have let security handle it. Instead, Dolly set her rhinestone microphone aside. She walked over slowly. Knelt down. Face to face. Close enough to hear his shaky breath. “Tonight, sweetheart… this stage is yours.” No rehearsal. No key change discussion. Just one tiny voice beside a legend who has seen almost everything. And 20,000 people standing in silence, tears falling without apology. It wasn’t polished. It wasn’t perfect. But somehow… it felt bigger than any song she’s ever sung. And years from now, when people talk about Dolly Parton, they may not start with the awards or the records. They may start with the night she gave the stage away.

“Aunt Dolly… Can I Sing With You Just Once?” — The Night a Stadium Fell Silent Some concerts are remembered for the fireworks. Others are remembered for…

TODAY’S SAD NEWS: Patrick Mahomes HEARTBROKEN TO ANNOUNCE HIS 2-YEAR-OLD SON BRONZE HAS BEEN DIAGNOSED WITH A RARE AND DANGEROUS DISEASE

TODAY’S SAD NEWS: Patrick Mahomes HEARTBROKEN TO ANNOUNCE HIS 2-YEAR-OLD SON BRONZE HAS BEEN DIAGNOSED WITH A RARE AND DANGEROUS DISEASE In a moment that has shaken…

REPORT KANSAS CITY CROSSROADS EMERGES: The Kansas City Chiefs are being urged to recalibrate their long-term blueprint as anticipation builds around Travis Kelce and his looming retirement decision.

For more than a decade, Kelce has been far more than a Pro Bowl-caliber pass catcher, serving instead as the heartbeat of Kansas City’s offensive identity and…