Zuzu : Turning a Lonely Childhood Into a Space of Belonging
When people step into Zuzu Café on Arambol Beach, they often tell me it feels warm, open, and full of life. Groups sit together, conversations flow, and travelers from all over the world connect like old friends.
But what most people don’t know is that Zuzu was born from the exact opposite environment I grew up in.
A Childhood of Strict Rules
My parents were strict. Very strict, fr.
Home wasn’t a place of connection. It was a place of rules, discipline, and control. There was no dining out, no spontaneous fun, no laughter-filled nights. Looking back, I realize what I missed the most wasn’t money or things. It was belonging.
Building What I Missed
When I opened Zuzu Cafe, I didn’t just want to serve coffee and pizza. I wanted to create the space I had longed for as a kid. A place where people could gather freely, where conversations could stretch into the night, and where joy wasn’t rationed.
Every time I see a group of travelers laughing over a cappuccino or friends sharing a pizza, it feels like I’m rewriting my own story. Zuzu is not just a cafe. It’s therapy, healing, and a celebration of the freedom I never had.
Why Zuzu Matters
For me, Zuzu stands for four simple things:
Belonging : Everyone is welcome here.
Freedom : Stay as long as you like, laugh as loudly as you want.
Connection : Because food always tastes better when shared.
Joy : In small things, like good coffee, warm bread, or an avocado toast piled high with toppings.
Zuzu is my way of giving the world what my childhood home never gave me.
An Invitation to You
If you’re ever in Arambol, come by Zuzu. Sit down, order something you love, talk to a stranger, or bring your friends.
Because this place isn’t just mine anymore. It’s yours too.
A cafe built out of loneliness, now alive with laughter.
A home for everyone who walks through its doors.
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