The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age (Melbourne) and Brisbane Times run the same first-person lifestyle story about Rome. The author describes the period after losing a job and wanting to avoid “misery,” then taking a trip to Italy’s capital as a form of relief. Across the three publications, the article recounts the first visit as a “remedy,” with the writer saying they experience “bliss” in many aspects of the city. The pieces use similar wording and present the trip as a personal experience rather than a reported news event. No additional, separately sourced details are provided in the excerpts beyond the general framing of the author’s motivation and their overall positive impression of Rome. The three outlets therefore converge on a shared narrative: job loss prompts a need to change perspective, and the author’s time in Rome is portrayed as consistently enjoyable. The content is presented as a human-interest travel account, with emphasis on the writer’s sentiments and observations rather than on specific factual reporting about events in Rome.