His own philosophy of life is revealed by Vladimiros Kyriakidis in an interview he gave to Hello, which is also published by Yannis Vitsa, talking both about the times when he did not have financial flexibility, and about the “demons” he exorcised.

– You spent days when you didn’t have a single euro. What would you say today to a person who is experiencing it?

“Yes. I went through it and I wish no one else would. I know that money is a very great need of the time, because unfortunately it rules and determines which members we will be in a society.

I would advise anyone who experiences this to turn inward, to see what the real needs of man are. You’re going to tell me… Isn’t that a little utopian? Of course it is, because a family that is hungry cannot think of what we mention.

But if we bring the cultivation from our childhood years to schools, we will certainly start to perceive our life differently and we will understand that happiness is not hidden in a lot but in a little.

In my family, my parents raised three children from nothing. We didn’t miss anything, but even when it happened, we were still happy.”

-In the first years of the theater, how did you manage financial insecurity?

“I had found the source. When I discovered the theater, I was overjoyed. We weren’t getting paid, but I was doing what I wanted to do. We were eating bread… We didn’t get hurt! I never went with the social must, but with my wants”

-Who were your demons?

“At this moment I can probably only dwell on various phobias, cowardices that I had. My demons were in rationalizing, seeing why any condition occurs, which as a child and teenager was not easy to do. As I grew older, I understood that what I was looking for at a younger age came and married me to the theater.”

– What were you looking for?

“The kindness of people, solidarity, elegance and understanding”.

-Do you think that you did not experience kindness or solidarity in your childhood and teenage years?

“I experienced them but, as I grew older, I thought about them more deeply and more meaningfully. There was clearly love, kindness from the parents, from the social environment, but I was always looking for something deeper in my life, which I could not find. I couldn’t identify with my classmates. There was something else going on inside me that I wasn’t able to understand.”

-Did you experience bowling because of this event?

“It wasn’t exactly bowling. It’s just that when you can’t identify with your peers, you automatically become marginalized, but not with the intention of making fun of you. They couldn’t match our nits.”

Source: womenonly