• Ruby Simpson
  • Jessica Simpson
  • Fallen Comrade
jul. – aug. 2025

Smbdy call Olivia Newton John!

A boppin blog detailing the travels of three gods and their comrade returning to Greece Les mer
  • Reisens start
    10. juli 2025

    Ey, it’s the holiday

    10. juli, Frankrike ⋅ ⛅ 27 °C

    Welcome one, welcome all, back to Mount Olympus!

    I know what you’re thinking… haven’t you already seen a blog of a similar title, with a similar writing style and similar opening lines…? I m u s t be an impostor!

    Have no fear, for I am only an impostor of myself! The similar title is, of course, a reference to Grease, the movie, once more.

    Why, you ask? Well, you must be more foolish than you look! We are, obviously, going on a burger tasting tour of the world, what with it being the greasiest food.

    No, I’m kidding, fool you once shame on me, and all that. In reality, we are only calling Olivia Newton John because she is an old family friend and, for reasons unknown, we can’t reach her…

    Is it in poor taste to joke about death?

    Anyway.

    Once again, I’m jesting!! Fool you twice, where’s the shame?? On you!! We are going back to Greece, babay!!

    Well, in a few days.

    Why am I writing my blog now, then, I hear you question? Well, do I look to be at home? No. I am in Paris. SO THE HOLIDAYS HAVE COMMENCED and so too does the blog.

    (It is worth mentioning that I harboured no intentions of writing a blog before we got to Greece but, alas, Dad said he would be writing today’s story and so I had to do the same. It’s a question of journalistic integrity, really.)

    So! Once more unto the breach, as Shakespeare said or whatever.

    Today I woke up from a too short sleep, and funnily enough my watch broke only a few weeks ago, and so since that day, despite having a second watch, a kindle, a phone, and a computer that are all on the right time and which were all used that morning, I have abandoned all concept of time. I was, and I cannot stress this enough, soooo sure that I had been woken around 9:30. So I’m going about my morning, packing my bag (why do in advance what you can leave till the last minute), downloading books from my computer onto my kindle in a rush, unplugging electrics and closing windows, generally running late, as you do, and of course, I did play “holiday” by Lil Nas X, as is a tradition between me and the twins.

    “Ey, it’s the holiday”.

    Anyway, we left in plenty of time, and (despite being stuck behind a slow car the whole way to the station) we arrived before our train! After some walking, some pictures, and one moment where Lily worryingly said that the blue train looked like a poop (please seek medical help if you’re pooping blue), our train arrived!

    We boarded with all the flair of english tourists, despite being in our home town. That is to say, we loudly spoke and laughed and took up space with no regard for the looks we got around us. For four straight hours.

    It was fun!

    And when I was in the train, I saw that it was like 8:30, and my world just realigned. I was so sure that it was 10:00 at least.

    One couple even said goodbye to us as they got off at their stop, to which I remarked that we were talking so loudly that they must have felt included in the conversation.

    It did not stop us.

    What did we talk about, you ask? Well, my friends, we recently watched the F1 movie in cinemas (I do recommend; Hans Zimmer composed some masterpieces as well), and Lily felt the need to go full white girl and watch the series, and the twins are obsessed with Damson Idris (the movie actor) and also hold a casual appreciation for actual F1 drivers. Lily’s favourite is, of course, Hamilton.

    Lewis Hamilton, to my chagrin.

    For while they spoke of this, I often interjected with Hamilton (the musical) lyrics or references. I have no interest in F1. They have no interest in Hamilton (my current obsession: I have listened to the soundtrack on repeat for two weeks. Oh yes, I can rap “Guns and Ships”. I am floating on a croissant).

    It made for riveting conversations. Lily would comment on everything in her F1 drive to survive episode, often saying “box box”, and I in turn would dramatically act out every character as I listened to the soundtrack of Hamilton (for those who know, you can imagine my difficulty at the end of “Non Stop”).

    Things calmed down when we ate some marmite on bread, (I had been running late and had had to forgo the most important meal of the day; I was h u n g r y). It is worth noting that I put stuff on my nails to stop myself from biting them, and that stuff is soooo vomit-worthy levels of disgusting, and stays in your mouth, and you never realise how much your nails touch your mouth when you eat a baguette until they’re covered in the flavour of a car seat.

    *shudder*. Anyway.

    Dad spoke about beginning his blog, and Lily wittily suggested it should be named “Weed and Seaweed”, for our main two stops include Amsterdam and Greece.

    Dad foolishly ignored her.

    Finally, after what seemed like hours (because it was), we pulled into the station and began the trek home. Mum and Dad were thinking about lunch, and the ultimate decision was onion flatbreads (which I dislike) much to my disappointment.

    Said disappointment was diminished when I discovered that Quentin had left a bunch of yoghurts at the flat, and I ate five of them, one in each flavour except apricot (if you enjoy apricot yoghurt then 1) you are the devil and 2) there are some in our fridge do you want them).

    After lunch, we hung out for a little, before it was decided we would go to Chatelet (which I l o v e to pronounce as “shitlet”). Instead of getting ready, my sisters and I did nothing for a while until Dad asked “are you ready girls?” To which he received a veritable chorus of “I’m not!”s as we leapt into action.

    I found that quite funny.

    Twenty minutes later, Lily’s room was a mess, but we were not! We sashayed out the door, the sashaying quickly halted by the five flights of stairs, and made our way to shitlet.

    Once there, we went to Bijou Brigitte on the hunt for sunglasses. And OMG GUYS ok hang on. So last year I had the most magnificent pair of sunglasses that looked sooo good on me, but, in true Ruby fashion, they broke the day before summer was over (never have I had a pair that has lasted to autumn and I don’t know why, it is my curse). And I FOUND THE EXACT SAME PAIR and just about jumped for joy and bought them.

    Lily also got sunglasses and also a waistlet as Tate calls them, before we headed off to find jeans (a failure) and phone cases (a success!).

    That done, we had to head home because mum had a call at 5. When we got back I did eat another yoghurt, because my sisters all had frozen ones. They then went to lie on the bed, and when I attempted to join them later, they refused to let me lie anywhere except at the end of a bed like a dog, and on top of that they refused me a pillow when they had two each!!

    Not so fair, not so fair.

    But anyway, after that, we were supposed to pack for Amsterdam tomorrow, but it has to be said I wasn’t feeling too joyful, in fact one might say I was forlorn, and so I mostly moped.

    Our good friend Dad had made some pasta for dinner which, might I add, he absolutely fished for compliments on: picture this. We are all sitting down, eating, and Dad says “well, I guess I tried my best *melancholy sigh*”. Cut to, all of us saying variations of “nooo, it’s really tasty” and Dad smiling smugly.

    After dinner, I wish I could say that I ate yoghurt but alas, there were none left. Instead, we had spread on bread. Now, if you know me, you know I am an avid jam hater. However, if you spend a lot of time with me, or, I suppose, if you have somehow made it this far into the blog, you will know that in the exceedingly rare moments in which I eat jam, I actually love it. Today was one of those moments, because Lily would not let me eat any Elton John Marmite. Meanie.

    It is worth mentioning that dinner was a hilarious affair. Allegra has the comedic timing of a god, I swear, and tonight she was putting it to use. (For example, while talking about Lily’s marmite, Lily said that if anyone throws it out the window, then she would throw them out the window. Allegra proceeded to extremely nonchalantly pretend to absolutely yeet it, adding sound effects of it falling all the way down (we are on the 5th floor). It was so funny that Lily fought laughter to say, “you missed the cats”, to which Allegra shrugged and then went “rraawrr”, a truly flawless imitation of the typical, angry cat sound. It was so funny we all died then and there). I died of laughter many a time. And of course, Lily and Tate joined in and really I felt like I was just watching a comedy show. It was great. Literally soooo funny. I cannot stress this enough, I was slapping my knees laughing.

    After dinner I lay upside down on a sofa to see what would happen, and was fairly disappointed when nothing did. After about twenty minutes, Dad’s blog was up and of course we had to read it and check for mistakes.

    I then finally got around to packing for Amsterdam and the concert tomorrow night, yay me! Points for productivity. And when that was done no one was feeling very energetic and Mum and Dad were in bed, and so I procrasti-Pinterested for a while, before finally sitting down to write this blog. Something I love and hate.

    And now, for our midnight feast that me and my sisters are going to have, to really mark the first day of the holidays!!

    And so, this is where we pause in the trek up Mount Olympus, folks.
    Debate of the day: is F1 a real sport?
    Bye family!!!
    Les mer

  • Hoofddorp

    11. juli, Frankrike ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

    Welcome one, welcome all, back to Mount Olympus!

    And so day two commences. I am writing this halfway through the day in an attempt to battle the endless late nights that usually come with writing the blog… (author’s note: she finished it the next morning)

    Alright so, today I woke up at some point and I had a blinding pain in my neck, couldn’t move it without pain. Ouch. And then I went back to sleep and woke up again, pain free. In any case, a decidedly un-excellent wake up.

    Breakfast consisted of hot chocolate, sadly without cornflakes, and during this time dad commended his own genius (he correctly told me that “once more until the breach” was from Henry the Vth, Shakespeare, and then decided to name one of his blogs a pun on this (look out for it) which annoyingly, I had planned on doing. You had better credit me, dad).

    My sisters and I discussed whether it would be better to have a son or daughter as a first child (a son) and the pros and cons of having twins, before dad told us to take care of the dishes, to which I answered, in my best Italian mafia accent, “I’ll take care of them,” and pretended to shoot them.

    The fact that my sisters laughed at this, I believe, is an insight to our fatigued state (midnight Dorito feasts are never good plans before early wake ups).

    Anyway.

    We then packed up our stuff, had some discussions which I have been forbidden from writing about for the general public, all I can say is Lily has weird opinions, and then, after a brief shouting match (again, sadly redacted), we left!

    As we descended the stairs, Olivia somehow carrying a suitcase down the five floors even as I had nothing in my hands, she joyously exclaimed, “We’re going to Germany!”

    Yeah.

    Let’s chalk it up to the mental stress of carrying a heavy bag down five flights of stairs.

    In case anyone missed the memo, we are going to Amsterdam (in the Netherlands), to see a Stray Kids concert (one of Tate’s favourites)!!!

    We managed to get to the bus on time, Allegra made some jokes about how she was taller than all of us (a sad truth) and then we were at the RER station. Some signs pointed to a ticket office, which, apparently, is taquilla in Spanish. So, naturally, I made a hilarious joke: “can I have tequila instead of a ticket”, and everyone laughed (including dad, so I am elite now I don’t know what to tell you 🤷‍♀️).

    Sadly I could not have a tequila, however I was already drunk off power afforded to me when I made my father laugh, so I made my peace with it.

    We had a hard time buying tickets due to Paris’ ridiculous ticket system (fun fact: Paris’ metro system has been officially named the most complicated in the world, worse than London or New York) but managed to make it onto our platform with a minute to spare.

    On that train, first we played a quick game called “guess the song in my head for 5€”. I’m sure that you could never guess what the game consists of. Basically I give each sister one chance to guess the song in my head for 5€ if they ever get it. Since beginning this game a few weeks ago, they have yet to win.

    After that game, I updated my sisters on the 100th to 90th most popular ao3 ships, and then we realised, to our annoyance, that yesterday we forgot to mention that Lily is the son dad never had (her love for f1), I am the gay son he never had (theatre kid), Allegra is the ginger he never wanted (self explanatory) and Tate is the one he got right.

    We got off the train and Lily, Tate and I took the escalator up, and Mum, Dad and Leg shook their heads with *so much* disappointment.

    We were quite scared. It was rather menacing

    But it was no matter, since we got into the station and had to wait a while, so we decided to get food.

    And we went to Paul’s and the guy behind the counter was rather good looking. Allegra’s exact words were “smash the chef”, and we all stared at him for about ten minutes as we ordered. He totally must have seen us at one point, but such is life.

    We then carried this lunch onto our train, sat down, and it took off!

    Into the sky, and we were never seen again.

    Sadly I am joking, we will see you guys again, worry not. But while I was on this train I ate a frankly astounding amount of olives, so I was happy. Lily watched F1 and I watched Iron Man 2, so at one point we were both watching men in racecar (a palindrome!) s.

    We also glimpsed the Atomium as we passed through belgium! That was fun!

    But I did pause Iron Man 2 which I have seen many a time, and watched f1 either Lily. It was the 2021 final race, and honestly, I was so hooked, and Lewis Hamilton, my favourite (I wonder why) didn’t win, Max Verstappen (nepo baby) did, because it was rigged. I watched it, and it was rigged. Seriously. The greatest tragedy of Lily’s life.

    We then discussed it with dad after, and it shows that you can know a man for 17 years and never know he follows f1 closely. Crazy.

    We made it to Amsterdam!! Yayyyy!!

    There are some weird people in Amsterdam. Lily was prejudiced because Max Verstappen is dutch. But I love the language it’s so funny and cute honestly. Our train stop is called hoofddorp which, like, I find hilarious. And the word for exit is uitgang, to which dad said, let’s go uit, gang! And it was quite funny.

    We made it to our Novotel (our Tovonel, as Lily calls it), fit in six in one revolving door section like weirdos, then had some trouble with our rooms but ultimately it was ok!

    Once there, we had showers, did makeup (which can take longer than one may think if, like Lily, you are drawing twenty tiny stars on your face), and then we went straight back out! On the train, we were forced to stand due to a big amount of people, and this train was not built to have people standing. Luckily my whole family managed to find a place to sit together after one atop, but I, for reasons unknown, must have been deemed the least favourite since I still had no seat.

    At least I slayed.

    Once we arrived, it was mental, big amounts of people, and Lily had an idea. “Let’s get Tate a light stick”, she whispers through technology. I quickly agree. You see, a light stick is a specific K pop concert thing, you get one and it bluetooth connects to someone working at the stadium, and everyone’s light up in synchronicity. A true K pop fan is always armed with their light stick. It has been Tate’s dream for months.

    And so, against Mum and Dad’s wishes, Lily and I did a click and collect for efficiency, headed off under the guise of finding a toilet,,,, and then surprised Tate with it as we stood in the queue.

    You can imagine Mum’s disdain for us as human beings.

    You can imagine how Tate thought of us as gods.

    But then, the queue starts racing forwards, and after one photo, we’re in! We make our way up the stairs, to our seats… and here comes the annoyance.

    Okay imagine this. You are two friends at a concert. Two girls come up to you, ask if you wouldn’t mind moving forward five rows (a better view) so that they can enjoy it with their sisters. Ticketmaster chaos forced us apart like the hands of fate. Do you, A) say “of course, thanks for the better seats, have fun with your sisters,” or B) be a meanie and say “no”.

    Like???

    I feel like I would say yes. They weren’t with anyone else, it was sooo strange. So Lily and I sat five rows away from Allegra and Olivia. Throwing dirty looks at the two girls next to us.

    Also, some dude lost one airpod and I felt so bad for him.

    But then, the hands of fate I mentioned earlier (Chekhov’s gun) ? They used their magic, and four seats behind me and Lily had been abandoned, so we called the twins up, climbed over our seats, and the four of us were together once more!

    Yayyy

    The concert was not bad, I myself knew few of the songs and few of the members, really, but Tate screamed so loud at every song that it was allll worth it. I filmed a lot.

    After the concert was over, some girls in front of us said “have you guys lost this airpod?” And honestly I was so relieved for that poor dude, and I was like excuse me! Who was it that lost an airpod?” And his head popped out of the crowd and he was soo happy I was just like wow, weight off my shoulders.

    We left the concert and joined mum and dad, who had, lets say, had a few (mum sent a sappy message to the wrong group), and we all got up and formed a dance circle, Dad’s moves were absolutely hilarious, ours were on point, a good time was had by all, and then we went home.

    Trains were funny, because we got sent in the wrong direction, then dad went to ask for help from a lady, got all the way up to her, was about to tap her on the shoulder when he realised -get this- that she was *not* in fact, someone who works here, and just a woman in a yellow jacket. He had to full on walk of shame and embarrassment back to us, it was the peak of hilarity, comedians everywhere have either given up or are frantically making skits about it, I 10/10 recommend.

    We made it to the right station, as our train pulled away. Yay us.

    So we waited til 00:11, I updated my sisters on the next ten most popular ao3 ships, and then dramatically sang “Aaron Burr, sir”, and then our train arrived, and we made it to the airport, we ran over to the next platform, luckily the train was pulling away, but stopped so we could get on? How nice!

    And then we made it. Home sweet home.

    Novotel sweet tovonel.

    And then we realised we lacked makeup remover, and so I literally scrubbed a layer of skin off my lips trying to get my lipstick off, and ouch, that hurt. They’re all cracked now.

    Mum and dad were straight asleep, I hear them snoring from the other room.

    And there you have it, lads! A too detailed account of our day!

    And so this is where we pause our trek up Mount Olympus, folks.
    Debate of the day: were we acting privileged by asking people to move seats, or were they just mean?
    Bye family!!!
    Les mer

  • Dyslexics, nil.

    12. juli, Nederland ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

    Welcome one, welcome all, back to Mount Olympus!

    Today was rather a chill day (or would have been if it weren’t for Lily endlessly complaining). In summary, I awoke at, maybe 11, and did absolutely nothing until 11:30 at which point I woke up mum and dad.

    We began to get ready, and I wrote yesterday’s blog (all my attempted time management came to nothing, surprise surprise), and Lily got increasingly irritable as she got hungrier.

    We then realised that Tate was not awake.

    Dad, in a valiant effort to change this fact, said “what’s that? Huynjin outside our hotel?! Bang Chang on the roof!!” Which I found hilarious.

    Tate eventually made it out of bed, and got ready, and we were off to conquer the challenges that would face us on this coming day. We left at 12:21 (another palindrome), and with a swing in our already decidedly swingy steps, we made our way up to the ticket scanners, up to the station, up to the announcement board, before promptly going back down to the ticket scanners because we were in the wrong place.

    But we did find the right train eventually, however at some point dad was talking about their systems, I said “well that’s stupid,” and everyone thought I was talking about dad and he was rather offended.

    Once on the train, we sat and laughed and did nothing for a while, happy as clams, and then…

    Disaster struck.

    In the form of mother.

    Sometimes, at seemingly random intervals, with no warning, mum will ask to see our screen time. Any child who has been in such a situation understands the abstract, but nonetheless pure, terror that struck down my sisters and I (with the exception of Lily, who is an adult, and who also has no concept of solidarity it seems (later on she told our parents that we were all on our phones, which was not the case; Allegra was reading, Olivia was napping, and I was quietly listening to the Hamilton soundtrack). Anyway.) and Allegra, the first unlucky victim, handed over her phone as Olivia and I shot sympathetic looks but frantically checked our times.

    It was bad.

    But upon arrival at the station, we realised we had a half hour walk before arriving at our brunch place. Lily just about died upon hearing this, and decided to speed walk.

    A sight to behold.

    It was as if all the inhabitants of Paris (notoriously fast walkers) possessed my sister. It was like I’ve never seen before: she weaved seamlessly through tourists and tables; she smoothly stepped between poles and trees; she seemed effortless in her speed and precision. And, it would seem that she not only inherited the speed from Parisians, but also their unstoppable disgruntlement at literally everything: loudly complaining about tourists despite being one herself.

    And that unstoppable force met an immovable object when we passed the hotel where mum and dad got engaged, and we had to turn back and take a photo. Of course.

    But then Lily and I headed forward, I tried to learn from her for next year, and so we sped through Amsterdam as the others got to see a great sight: Prik, the gay club that Colin goes into in the Amsterdam episode of Ted Lasso. I was sooo jealous. Thankfully they got a picture.

    But we made it to the lunch place, well brunch I suppose, and honestly the food was quite tasty, I drowned my pancake in chocolate sauce, it was bad.

    But so delicious.

    In the streets of Amsterdelphia, which we wandered for the rest of the afternoon, I tripped about a hundred times. No one else tripped, but I kept slipping and tripping and I don’t know why. We visited a tulip market. We entered two english bookstores, in one of which Allegra bought a “blind date with a book”, which is a wrapped up book with only a brief description of what the book is about, so you don’t know what you’re buying.

    Based on the maybe four indications, Lily made a guess that it was Dance of Thieves, a book Allegra already has. Allegra refused to unwrap her book.

    Mum and dad concluded that they weren’t enamoured with Amsterdam, and Lily wholeheartedly agreed, but I was completely of the opposing ideology. I was already planning my move in to an Amsterdam house, student life, I mean, I have never felt more at peace and relaxed in a place.

    That could have been all the second hand weed that I was inhaling, but potayto potahto..

    After making some jokes (such as max vercappen, or dudududu, niet instappen), we headed to our final destination: a library. Lily was scandalised that we didn’t know joe and the juice. Does anyone know joe and the juice? Anyway.

    In the library, no one wanted to visit it, but Mum wanted to, and seemed rather sad that no one would go with her, so I volunteered.

    It was fairly boring. I mean. It’s a library.

    But as we came downstairs, defeated, mum turns to me and says, “let’s tell them it was really cool”, and I say, “yeah. It was awesome. There was a waterfall.”

    We shared a conspiratorial laugh.

    So we showed up, like “yeah, there was a viewing deck, and a waterfall, and they were serving like, little free drinks and some pancake stuff” and everyone was sooo annoyed that we had to tell the truth.

    But me and mum laughed. It was worth it.

    After that, it was train home, thankfully we were near the station. We picked out a magnet from the shop inside, and got on our train. It was at the terminus, so we had to wait, and while we waited, Allegra opened her “blind date with a book”, and, lo and behold, it was Dance of Thieves. Lily supremacy. Allegra annoyance: she already has this book, in hardback.

    But then unhappiness grew as the train we were sitting in got cancelled, and we had to switch to a train leaving in 20 minutes.

    We still managed to get seats. We are the best.

    Luckily this train did leave, and not much happened. The only thing I wrote in my notes of things to include was the moment I began to ask “is it fair-“ and Allegra cuts me off, saying “no. There’s a life lesson for you!” And we all laughed.

    And we complained about tourists. Yes, we know we are tourists.

    No, that will not cause us to refrain.

    Oh, and there was definitely a strong critique of manspreading.

    When we got back to the hotel, we relaxed, and this was the moment spoken about earlier, where I listened to Hamilton, Allegra read, etc.

    I also decided to learn morse code, and as I write this blog now, I can recite the entire alphabet. It is so fun, and sadly, like everything that interests me, my sisters hate when I talk about it.

    Allegra was right. Life isn’t fair.

    We then got back up to go out and get some dinner, because the hotel doesn’t have room service. After taking the bus, we picked an Italian restaurant, which was called Christiani’s.

    Two things you should know about Allegra is that she is hilarious, and probably dyslexic.

    As we walked into the place, she says “Christians 1, atheists nil”. Because they won us over, you see. However, we were turned down, and had to walk of shame back out. Allegra comedically says, “Christians 2, atheists nil”. We then inform her that it is called Christiani’s, at which point she questions her entire existence, and says in wonderment, “damn. Christiani’s 1, dyslexics nil”.

    It was all in the timing. Maybe you had to be there. In any case, Allegra is hilarious and dyslexic.

    We ended up getting takeaway vegan burgers and nachos for me, wandered around a supermarket (Lily concluded that since they had a wide selection of beer, Amsterdam might not be so bad), then headed home. We realised we didn’t have a bottle opener, but dad impressed us all by opening it on a lamp.

    As we ate, we watched Ted Lasso, as always an amazing show, and then had a yummy desert of chocolate cheesecake from a supermarket.

    We were fairly chill as I began to write this blog, but sadly tomorrow morning we have to get up really early and so mum and dad made us pack our clothes.

    One thing about my sisters is that they are not organised.

    It was chaos.

    But somehow we managed, and then it was off to bed as I wrote this here blog (not my best, but damn am I tired) and the twins talked and Lily (can you guess it?) watched f1 (you guessed it!!) telling me about the worst of the crashes, and talking about our fave, Sir Lewis Hamilton (who, we looked up, was knighted by the Prince of Wales in 2022 when he was 36, though not the youngest; Andy Murray the tennis player was 29. However, the youngest person who received damehood was the sailor Ellen MacArthur, at 28 years old, so take that, men. Anyway funfact.)

    And so this is where we pause our trek up Mount Olympus, folks.
    Debate of the day: is manspreading rude or understandable? Is it a double standard?
    Bye family!!!
    Les mer

  • Eight minute power nap

    13. juli, Frankrike ⋅ ☀️ 30 °C

    Welcome one, welcome all, back to Mount Olympus!

    I know, I know, I didn’t write yesterday. Well, friends, let me tell you why.

    I fell asleep.

    Yeah.

    I hate naps to my very soul. I have always critiqued nap takers. Of course, this excludes the eight minute power nap that I have been known to partake in before. However, yesterday night, I did sleep while watching Ted Lasso.

    Anyway.

    Let me begin the day!

    So, we woke up way to bloody early considering I had been up past midnight to write my blog from the day before, and so in our fatigued state, we were perhaps a bit, well, for lack of better word, mental.

    Allegra at one point said that she watched young royals, and Lily replied with sooo much disdain in her voice “Alright gay boy.” We don’t know why she said this. Is Lily secretly homophobic? Considering as how she lived with two gay boys last year, I would be surprised. At the time, we all found this hilarious though.

    Another such moment can be found when I asked mum a question, and she responded, “do you know what [redacted] time it is?” At Lily’s reply of 5:30, mum continues “yeah, it’s too bloody early for this conversation” which, while I was offended, I also found hilarious.

    We then got out of bed, got dressed, and at one point someone said “Girls just want to have fun,” and I, in despair and fatigue and hunger, sort of desperately scream replied “Ruby just wants to have breakfast!”, something I did not get. Everyone ignored me, and Lily and I partook in an interesting disagreement involving Pretty Woman and a k-pop song.

    I went to ask mum’s opinion (shaking in fear at the thought of being shut down like last time), and mum agreed with me, so I turned back to Lily, and called “Lily, mum just said “F**k you!”” , which offended Lily greatly. As I laughed at her gullibility and Mum grumbled, I left, only to race back in and fake cry with Lily when dad calls “Ruby, mum just said she hates you!”, which honestly is believable in such a sitch.

    She didn’t, though.

    Anyway, we make it out to the train with plenty of time, up to the platform and we hang out with joy, only for mum to just destroy all hope by checking our screentime.

    We didn’t see this coming. Mum is adapting.

    Anyway, we did come to the very happy conclusion that screentime must be wrong because apparently I had spent 45 minutes on my dart scoring app, which, maybe I am boring, but not *that* boring. I mean, who even stares at a dart scoring app for 45 minutes without even a dart board??

    It also said that Allegra spent 1h30 on her phone, in the space of one hour, so. Yeah.

    Something is wrong.

    Anyway, after that conclusion was come to, we realised our train was late, and I said “we’ll be fine, we have plenty of time till the eurostar leaves, nothing will go too wrong”. A train on the opposite platform, scheduled to leave in a minute, would take us to our destination, and dad said “it won’t leave before we get there, let’s run!” So we ran down, scanned tickets, scanned them again, ran up, got on the platform, train pulling away.

    I regrettes my words about the Eurostar since today seemed like a day for jinxes. Dad, however, had no such regrets, and with joy, announced “we’ll be alright, we’ll make it”.

    What the hell, dad?

    We made it onto a different train after a couple more minutes, happy to finally be in a place of success, arrived at amsterdam airport with a swing in our step, looked for the announcement screens-

    “I hope it’s not that cancelled one,” I said with a laugh.

    It was. It was that cancelled one.

    As I began to despair, our determined mum and dad did not rest, striding up to an information desk, where a very confident woman assured us that if we took a train to utrecht, the eurostar would be leaving from there.

    She was so sure of herself that our confidence came back, and we strutted down to the station, hopped on a train to utrecht, and realised that once we got to utrecht we would have only around ten minutes to find our platform.

    And also, while we were on that train, Allegra lost all her dignity by cutting her pear with a a saga card. She can’t bite pears.

    It was hilarious to me.

    Upon arrival at utrecht, we were so ready to speed our way across, and then immediately realised that the eurostar would be departing from was the platform we just pulled into.

    Our luck was turning up! (We all thought privately inside our heads, terrified to jinx it by speaking the words into the world). We rushed to a place to grab some sandwiches, and coffee for some, rushed back down, and joyously hopped onto the train, success pushing us forward.

    Immediately thwarted by some Australians in our seats, but whatever.

    I didn’t do much on that train, admittedly I could have begun to write the blog but I wasn’t feeling it, instead I listened to “vampire diaries”, mgk’s new song, on repeat. For the whole time.

    I watched f1 over Lily’s shoulder, slept a little (eight minute power nap, so utterly forgivable) , and yeah. Ate some yummy chocolate.

    And then we made it home with little disruptions, it was fairly quick and easy, we picked up stuff for lunch, then we ate lunch in Lily’s apartment.

    Afterwards we had to clean because mu friend Andrea is staying at Lily’s apartment while we are gone, and I, the only helpful daughter, was the only one who helped clean. My ability to clean is based on the possibility of listening to music, and I enjoyed Hamilton’s soundtrack, of course acted out as I cleaned.

    That done, I chilled with my sisters (tate napped; what a loser) and we listened to some TTPD, still a great album, and soon enough we were heading back out to the cinema, to go watch our man Jonathan Bailey in jurassic world: renaissance.

    I had, on my feet, the world’s sparkliest plaster because Lily gave it to me due to the blister. And Lily is the type of person who owns sparkly, bright purple plasters.

    I was only watching for the plot (the plot: Jonathan Bailey and our queen Scarlett Johansson), and honestly? I was traumatised. I had seen none of the others, had no context, and movies that have people die in gruesome ways due to our own human hubris and self-importance make me deeply uncomfortable and uneasy.

    At least Jonathan Bailey was a smash.

    We left the cinema ultimately disappointed (Lily didn’t like it at all, she kept saying “renaissance? Should have let it die”), and after a brief stop in Sephora, we made our way home.

    Climbing the five flights of stairs was quite painful, made easier only by Allegra’s funny comments (as Lily passed me at the end, she said, in her best commentator voice, “and Max Verstappen overtakes Leclerc!”), and so upon entry in the flat, I flopped on the sofa, never to move again.

    Our entrance was punctuated by laughter once more thanks to Allegra: as we walked in, Lily commented that it smelt like mange toutes, and Leg replied, “mange my toute” which we found hilarious.

    But then calmness fell, and Lily tested out her eyeliner on her hand as we discussed our sister tattoo that we plan on getting one day. She then showed us what we had written, Olivia and I said “awww”, Allegra said “I love my stinks?” and we all laughed again. Lily had obviously written sisters, not stinks.

    Lily then said, “that’s a good idea for our tattoo”, and the other of us chorused, “what, I love my stinks?” to more general hilarity, but apparently Lily meant the little women quote written on the back of the fancy edition she bought for Allegra. To clarify, “I could never love anyone as I love my sisters”. Idk if that’s a good idea because it is rather long. Anyway.

    Lil and I then played some Swift Alert games (free on every 13th of the month), immediately failed due to a foolish mistake (in my haste I put Sparks Fly, not Electric Touch, a rookie mistake) and then we watched some Ted Lasso as we enjoyed dad’s pasta.

    He said, “we didn’t have pesto, so I really did my best”, then looked around with a smirk. No melancholy sigh, but it was implied as we all grudgingly congratulated Dad on a meal well made.

    I migrated to the floor due to the staggering discomfort of Lily’s sofa, and promptly fell asleep. And did not wake up to write my blog.

    And so this is where we pause our trek up Mount Olympus, folks.
    Debate of the day: eight minute power naps: acceptable or not?
    Bye family!!!
    Les mer

  • No small amount of difficulty

    14. juli, Hellas ⋅ 🌬 26 °C

    Welcome one, welcome all, back to Mount Olympus!

    For real this time, because that’s right, WE ARE IN GREECE LADDIES!!

    And it was a long road to get here.

    We woke up much, much too early. I was fairly sad because I thought Lily was next to me so I went to hug her and she wasn’t.

    I wept every tear in my little soul :(.

    But she was not dead, she was only showering, and I showered after her and so began my day! I ofc did greek plaits as I call them, aka rope braids, which give me Mamma Mia hair so obviiii. Call me Donna. From the first movie, of course, Meryl Streep supremacy.

    Anyway.

    Afterwards, I had a breakfast sandwich, packed up all my stuff, and then we left with time to spare!

    It was a fairly boring morning to be honest, something I even wrote on my list of things that happened today. In the train, I wrote yesterday’s blog because I am n o t o r i o u s l y bad at time management (it is 11:24 as I compose this very blog), and then we were in the airport!

    The very first thing the twins and I noticed was a good looking guy, we all whispered smash, Lily tried to catch a glimpse. When she finally did, she was well disappointed and criticised our taste in men. We think she is on drugs.

    At lunch, Lily had italian (fancy) while the rest of us had sandwiches from the most uninterested cashiers, It was borderline something out of a movie I swear.

    I complained to my father how my day would be boring, how I had nothing written on my list of interesting things, and Dad was sympathetic to my plight.

    And in a show of blog solidarity, he then made a comedic joke.

    Lily was talking about f1 as she is wont to do, how Hamilton had petronus written on his helmet, Allegra said “expecto petronus” and Lily informed her that I had made that joke many a time. It is true. Dad then said, “you have come to *expecto* a petronus joke?” And then pointed at me, my phone, back at me, back to my phone. I had to write it down.

    After seeing Hamilton’s watches and Hamilton in a magazine (as well as smashable Damson Idris), we headed to the boarding area, in which mum took a bad photo, sent it to our family, we all complained, mum said sorry, and promptly sent it to another half of our family. We were s c a n d a l i s e d.

    But then we began to board!!! Lily took notes from dad and made some melancholy comments and sighs about her hair, so I complemented her plaits. *eye roll*

    We also discovered that tickling the back of Tate’s neck is actually hilarious because she is ticklish there, and she kept making strangled sounds and like, throwing her head back whenever you touch her neck. It was a moment of great hilarity and chaos, because she would tell us off and someone would poke her neck and we would all laugh.

    Lily and I were going quite crazy at this point. Indeed, my sunglasses fell behind my head and I used the long part to pretend I was speaking on comms. Lily has never laughed harder. Once in our seats, she kept making jokes about boeing and how it sounded like boingggg, and so I pretended to saw her head off with my security explanation paper, and she then poked my eye (on accident) so hard that she was disgusted as to how much “squishy eye ball” she had felt.

    Mum simply rolled her eyes, aloof, above the petty squabbling of the commoners beside her.

    However she partook when, as we noticed that mum’s hand was in a t-rex shape, she formed mini claws, and Lily and I fell about laughing again. It actually killed us. We are now on our 3rd lives.

    And then to our dismay, the pilot announced that we would be thirty minutes late in take off, but he was funny about it, and I decided I would go to war for the guy if he ever asked cos he was so cheerful.

    And after around 13 minutes, the pilot then announced that…

    There was no change.

    However!!

    He solidified his status as my fave pilot everrr when he said that children who wanted to see the cockpit could!!!

    Of course, we all looked at Tate, she is the youngest looking, and made her take pics. It was sooo impressive. She absolutely sashayed down the aisle, told us she chatted with the pilots about music, and showed us the photos.

    I want to be Tate when I grow up. Or a pilot.

    And then, we were off!! Take off was surprisingly speedy I felt like there was no taxiing, and then bam, in the air!

    Lily stresses a lot and so she grabbed mine and mum’s hands. A rookie mistake that, once you’ve done it, you will never do it again.

    Mum and I have notoriously clammy hands. Lily was fairly disgusted.

    Also, I’m pretty sure I have been disowned by my family, in that as a joke, the moment the seatbelt sign went off, I flung off my seatbelt, saying “and not a moment too soon!”

    Mum was fairly unhappy and made me put it back on, and dad looked over with so much disdain and disappointment that I didn’t know how I would ever get back my father’s love.

    The flight itself was fairly chill, to no one’s surprise Lily watched f1 and I listened to Hamilton and read, and then we did a sudoku which we COMPLETED I WILL HEAR NO DISAGREEMENTS and after what felt like hours (because it was), we landed!

    Mum took some pics of us outside the plane, and admittedly I felt like one of Tom Cruise’s best characters.

    Ethan Hunt, of course, from that time he held onto the side of a plane taking off!

    No, I jest with you, you fools! Of course I mean Maverick.

    However I have never seen the pictures so it is possible I simply look like a fool.

    Moving on!

    I pretended to chuck Lily in a bin, and also I pretended to trade her for money, and Lily did not appreciate. Her face was welllll unimpressed.

    But we made it out of the airport and gosh darn!

    Perhaps you recall how last year, my sisters and I were, perhaps, not unimpressed, but, well, underwhelmed by our first view of Greece. This time, Santorini was absolutely as we imagined it. 10/10 recommend.

    We found the guy who was renting us a car with no small amount of trouble, he and dad called each other but were just across the road from each other, it was funny. As they checked out the car, my sisters and I took pictures of our eyes in the sun. It was cool.

    There was one funny moment when I had photographed Olivia’s eye, Lily asked, “oh, is that your eye?” And Tate, with no hesitation, literally none, replied “no, it’s my butthole”.

    We may still be immature young children at heart, because we chuckled heartily.

    With no small amount of trouble once more, we drove through the smol streets of Santorini to the place we would be staying! Unbeknownst to me, it was quite late, and the sun was setting, which looked quite cool. But alas, we had no time to stop and watch, so we drove to a place where we could park.

    Later on, Dad likened his parking of the car to the landing of a plane.

    As we walked to our place, dad panicked, asking everyone who had the other bag. None of us knew what bag he was referring to, because he *had it in his hand*. That’s right, ladies and gents, alzheimers is not so early onset in this man!

    We got to our place with, once again, no small amount of difficulty, (we were confused as to why the code wasn’t working in the lockbox before realising we were at the wrong house) and immediately headed right back out to have dinner!

    It was quite an eventful dinner.

    You see, mum was trying to learn the entire greek language, it would seem, in the span of one dinner, and kept asking the guy who was serving us how to say this and how to pronounce that. In typical mum fashion she had to call some of us out while we were ordering, and attempted to peer pressure me into ordering something I didn’t like, etc.

    Anyway.

    At some point, Lily likened it to flirting, we all joked about it, and mum just *did not* change her ways, nor did she deny the flirting allegations, something I pointed out to everyone, leading to laughter.

    But all the flirting/not flirting paid off when the guy brought over two beers on the house. For free beer, I’m surprised dad didn’t start batting his eyelashes.

    At some point during the meal, I said “you could not pay me to eat with my mouth open, not even a billion dollars”, because my family sometimes does and I don’t get it. Lily, for reasons unknown to all but her and perhaps some higher, maybe some lower, being, replied, “for a billion dollars? I’d eat shit”. Allegra then tagged on “for a billion dollars? Hell yeah, bring on the shit!” And honestly I was so perplexed by the turn this had taken, and then mum asks me, “can it be, like in a cake? Or is it just pure shit?”

    And?? I was just??? So confused???

    I told mum that I had never spoken of eating shit and anyway, I was not the one to ask about how one must consume the feces in order to earn the billion dollars, and thankfully the conversation moved on.

    We also made mum and dad guess whose eyes where whose, and it goes to show you can know a person your whole life but they don’t know you.

    After dinner, we took the long way home, scenic routes make for nice pictures, and then we stood on the roof of our house and I felt utterly peaceful as I sat on the edge.

    We then chilled on the little balcony, laughing, joking, and annoyingly, listening to some woman’s music. She has been playing it really loudly for hours, with no care for anyone who lives near her, to the endless chagrin of Lily.

    I can’t decide which is more annoying, Lily’s complaints or the music.

    And so ended our first greek day, as we all went into our respective beds, Lily slept immediately but I admittedly read until two in the morning.

    And so this is where we pause our trek up Mount Olympus, folks.
    Bye family!!!
    Les mer

  • Random but decidedly banging.

    15. juli, Hellas ⋅ 🌬 27 °C

    Welcome one, welcome all, back to Mount Olympus!

    There is something innately calming about sitting on a rooftop in Santorini as the sun sets and bathes the white houses in a yellow glow, looking over at the ocean that continues as far as the eye can see before it fades into the purple-pink sky, and laughing with your sisters.

    I felt now would be a perfect time to start writing about my day.

    It started in a relaxing way, waking up at ten-ish to the sounds of Allegra pattering around, and Lily getting up. I decided to read, since we didn’t have anything immediately planned for the day.

    The two awake Simpson sisters (me not included) did some sport, ab workouts that left them in great pain.

    I will never understand them.

    I may join them tomorrow.

    Mum and dad went shopping to buy breakfastables, and returned with biscuits- the very same ones from biscuit time last year, bringing an onslaught of nostalgia along with the sweet sweet taste.

    Perhaps you recall the woman from yesterday, playing her music loudly for the whole community to hear. She was *still* going. In France, she would be guillotined for daring to disturb the peace, but in Santorini? May the unbothered times begin!

    I decided to finish writing yesterday’s rendition of the blog since we decided that we wouldn’t be leaving until around 2 in order to avoid the very worst of the midday sun. That took quite some time; never let it be said that I don’t give my all for my writing.

    But it was all worth it when I published it and my sisters and father laughed while reading it, which reassures me because I often doubt the quality of my blogs, something I told them all but they proceeded to mock me by saying “melancholy sigh”.

    Deservedly, honestly.

    We then began to get ready, choosing outfits, doing hair, drinking hot lemon and honey for Tate, who had lost her voice entirely when she woke up. And what better music to listen to for this activity than Allegra’s absolutely random but decidedly banging playlist?

    We went from the Bee Gees to Elton John to Stevie Wonder, Allegra scatting along. One time Tate skipped a song and Allegra’s joyous scatting cut off, her face told of heartbreak and betrayal and hurt, and Olivia hastily replayed the skipped song.

    It was a fun time.

    For lunch, we had some greek spinach pie, a mushroom pastry that tasted like ratatouille, and some tzatziki on bread. It was fairly delicious and properly greek, so I was satisfied. And soon enough it was time to put on suncream (shout out to the mole on the back of Lily’s neck), finalise our fits, and sashay out the door with confidence!

    As we walked to the car, my sisters and I sang some Raye, discussed my blog and the patriarchy with mother, and then waited for dad to come back with the car keys he had forgotten like a fool.

    We did pass a Santorini wood design shop, at which point Lily said “I wood design Santorini, but someone already has”, and dad said “woodn’t you want to buy a magnet from there?”

    So, they share a braincell.

    We drove along to our beach of choice, though it is worth noting that Santorini is not famed for its beaches. It was quite hot in the car, so it was a little irritable, and it is worth noting that dad’s driving through the winding, complicated roads of Santorini is impressive, if still not quite comparable to landing a plane.

    As we pulled into our parking spot, Lily loftily mused that you could tell that Greece was a hot country because of the size of the trees. Allegra ruined this sciency moment in a hilarious way by replying, “and also the heat”.

    We laughed. Lily did not.

    At the beach, we walked along the sand looking for a spot in shade, and eventually found one, although mum was not quite impressed with the beach we did settle for it, and my sisters immediately dove inti the waves. I joined them a bit later, and I think we spent hours jumping over every wave, and every time we joyfully exclaimed “wheee!”.

    We got quite destroyed by the waves which were harsh in nature, it stole the very hats from our heads, and we were forced to dive in to retrieve them, Allegra appearing very heroic when she saved Lily’s cap from certain doom.

    Planes kept landing at a nearby airport; mayhap eight in the time we were there. Ut was quite impressive and at times worrying by how low they were flying and the small waver when wind would blow.

    The four of us then tanned, and I regularly drifted off, and then I would wake up halfway through singing Alexander Hamilton in my head. I think in my half-awake-half-asleep dreams I was trying to sing it the whole way through? It happened often.

    I questioned my sanity.

    But alas, all good things come to an end, and we had to pack up and go to a supermarket in order to buy breakfastables for tomorrow as well as essentials such as shampoo.

    I honestly found it quite funny because Lily threw an a b s o l u t e hissy fit about not getting chocolate milk. But what can I say we can’t all be mature adults, *holds up head haughtily*.

    When we entered to our humble abode, I immediately lay on the floor, reading my book and listening to, you guessed it, Hamilton. My sisters took turns showering, and then went up to the top roof to hang out without me.

    How mean. I wept all the tears in my little soul :(.

    And then I too showered and headed up with my sisters. And so befell the time of utter peace, punctuated by a topless guy who we all looked at. It was funny.

    The music was good, the vibes were present, the view was gorgeous.

    Sadly it had to come to an end when dad called us down for dinner.

    It was decidedly delicious; everyone loves pasta salad. Sadly mum had a work call thing, but the rest of us laughed a lot at our own shenanigans. At one point Lily nearly spat her drink out. At another we decided that anytime someone said “we are young” we had to raise whatever was closest as if it were a pint of beer and we were all cheersing, which is a tiktok reference, but it bought much amusement when Allegra called it from the toilet.

    We don’t want to know what she raised.

    Afterwards, I read while Lily and Allegra did dishes, and Tate showered for about an hour. Dad was writing his blog and struggled for ages to find a title. Every time he picked up his phone I would ask “so, you’ve found the title?” And he would depressedly reply, “not yet”.

    And then mum, his inspiration, sprang forth from the depths of work hell, and it seemed dad found a title in mere moments.

    He should really follow my tactic of just picking something from the blog. But apparently the title finding is essential to the blog writing.

    Once mum was out, we began to plan tomorrow (Lily is strongly advocating for watching the f1 movie in an open air cinema), and so began….

    Biscuit time!!

    That’s right, foes and friends! The much loved, long awaited tradition returns!! Simply summon the legrechaun and biscuits shall be brought!!

    We laughed and joked, mum sang along to some live music played at a cafe nearby, peaceful times were had as dad and I finished writing our blogs.

    One funny moment occurred when Lily mentioned our plans for tomorrow, Ammoudi Beach, and Dad said “don’t swear at your mother”.

    We all laughed. Lily said she was talking about me.

    And last of all I should mention, for those perplexed about dad’s blog’s image’s captions, I told him he should caption them to make them more fun like I do, and he then captioned them about me. So yeah.

    What a strange man. He and mum are both a tad tipsy. Or as mum says, “happy”.

    Tate and I have just been taking turns tickling dad’s feet. It is quite funny. Literally hilarious.

    Update: he just chuckled and called us annoying children. He moved his foot :(. No more fun for Ruby and Tate.

    So, it’s fair to say that today has been much like Allegra’s playlist: random but decidedly banging.

    And so this is where we pause our trek up Mount Olympus, folks.
    Bye family!!!
    Les mer

  • Guest Star

    16. juli, Hellas ⋅ 🌙 26 °C

    Well, as announced in the title, today’s blog will not be a Ruby Regular but a Lily special!

    Welcome to Mount Olympus laddy boys! (Or something like that)

    You can expect a subpar level of comedy but an exemplary level prose in today’s blog and worry not, Ruby will be back tomorrow.

    Well I feel like we were all, as a collective, woken up by Olivia rushing to the toilet because she had woken up with a facial of her own snot, which as everyone knows is the best way to wake up in the morning.
    Me and leg then slowly made our way to the floor for our daily sport which, despite Ruby giving us hope in yesterday’s blog, she did not join us for. And honestly I wish I hadn’t joined us as my abs were sore. Laughing is painful guys, which means that in this group I am basically fighting for my life at any given moment.

    After this was the usual getting dressed, putting makeup on and doing hair, and that was just dad. Nah Jakes lads, Jakes.

    We then all got weirded out because our father had a work call and we’re not used to him being so serious and going such a long period of time without farting. It was very unsettling.

    Once we were recovered we then had the regular Greek lunch of pastries bread and tzatziki. Twas bussin.

    I am beginning to run out of sequential words so bear with me.

    In the aftermath of lunch we liberally (although it was more like Macron liberal aka just a bit Tory) applied sun cream before making our way to the car to begin our lil trip to Oia. And no I’m not shouting at you.

    The route was heavily scenic although dad seems to be having some trouble with his stick and so it was also a jerky route.

    We arrived at Oia and were unused to the amount of tourists around, much to my chagrin because I am a Parisian and therefore my average walking speed is twice that of a regular person. And tourist’s walking speed is half that of a normal person. You can imagine why I would be chagrined.

    But after much annoyance and even more steps we made it to Ammoudi Beach (I will refrain from making crass jokes) (we finally found Ruby hehe).

    My chagrin was then added to as the plan had been to walk along a dubious path towards a nice little swimming place. The plan was thwarted by gates and Greeks. Our planned paths had a large gate in front of it and a Greek guard who was turning away tourists assumedly in respect of the sign declaring a danger of falling rocks.

    Sad and feeling like a disappointed for letting the team down, as it had been my idea to do this little séjour, I dejectedly made my way to a smoothie shop where we all got smoothies and watched as tourist after tourist walked up to the guard and got turned away.

    However, joy struck and after staring morosely out at the water, wishing it was pouring rain instead of glaringly sunny, we realised that people were sneaking past the gates! Revolution strikes! Allegra theorised that someone had gone and beat up the guard. I privately theorised that Allegra had gone and beaten him up. We apprehensively made our way towards the path and discovered that no one had beaten up the guard, he was simply enjoying a beer, literally watching all the people file past and sneak over the gate. It made all of us highly amused.

    The path was dubious as promised, much to the joy of the little Lily within me who loved nothing more than clambering rocks. Unfortunately old Lily has developed a healthy fear of heights and falling to our her death. Old Lily nonetheless enjoyed the path which was a perfect level of clamberable.

    We then arrived at the destination, which was unfortunately filled with mum’s least favourite thing, tourists occupying the same space as us. We decided to keep calm and carry on and my sisters and I promptly dove into the aquamarine ocean, keen to get up onto an at least four meter high platform to then jump into the previously mentioned aquamarine ocean.

    Allegra is unfortunately slave to her fears but fortunately unbothered by her image as a fearless daredevil or rather lack of image as a fearless daredevil. Olivia, Ruby and I are however very much bothered and spend a lot of our time on holidays curating this image. We were therefore obliged to jump off that at least four metre platform.

    Twas scary bros.

    I jumped, realised how bloody high it was, fell for about five minutes and then landed with a resounding smack and a resulting wedgie.

    However I am able to say that unlike my weiney sisters I jumped immediately instead of deliberating over the pros and cons for about half an hour. I just jumped straight in.

    Fuck it, Yolo guys.

    After this I feel like nothing of importance happened and seeing as dad is writing a blog about the exact same happenings I’ll just give a recap of the highlights.

    Tate made a hilarious joke about Private Cruise and Semi-Private Cruise, Tom Cruise’s siblings. It was the funniest thing she’s ever said.

    We saw a funny sign (it will be photographed) which was secretly a British spy.

    We snacked on the boys, obvi. Let’s just say we won’t be hungry at dinner time.

    Arguments were had, wouldn’t be a Simpson Family Trip ™️ if there weren’t.

    I finally fulfilled the twins dream by saying “it’s alright guys, it’s on me” and buying us some delicious ice-creams. The twins need to learn to dream higher.

    And of course the evening ended on the bopping note of biscuits and beer. Nothing quite ends a day quite like the two Bs.

    And with that I bid you adieu and leave you on the mountain or whatever it is Ruby normally says.

    Debate of the day: was that guard justified in taking a beer break and letting everyone pass, therefore cancelling out all the work he had done all morning?
    Les mer

  • I am a very delicate noble flower

    17. juli, Hellas ⋅ 🌙 26 °C

    Welcome one, welcome all, back to Mount Olympus!

    I would like to start my blog by letting you know that I will not be addressing the baby Max Verstappen picture.

    And by saying that it is Taylor Swift’s 13 000th day on Earth, to all who celebrate!

    Now, on to the day!

    I woke up to Lily’s rather annoying alarm; as she and Allegra got up to read I lay in bed still, reading as always. And, of course, I was simultaneously singing The Schuyler Sisters in my head, as I am wont to do.

    They suffered through as I eventually got up, stepped over them like I was a noble and they were dying peasants in the French revolution, and made myself some breakfast, enjoying my food as I sat in front of the two of them close to tears, doing sit ups on the floor.

    Damn, I would have been a *damn good* noble during the French Revolution.

    Let them eat cake, y’all!

    (Fun fact, Marie Antoinette never said that. And also in the original french it’s “let them eat brioche”. So. Now you’re cultured.)

    Sadly I was immediately relegated to peasant mode as I had to pack my bag and help clean up and, to my great annoyance, I had to do under-bed checks, the bane of every Simpson child’s existence, and what’s more, mum insulted my honour by implying that I had not checked thoroughly.

    Of course, I challenged her to a jousting duel.

    And by that I mean I checked again as Mum laughed and said “this is how you get Ruby to do things”.

    It can be said that I was flung from my horse. Mother remains the jousting victor.

    But as we packed, my sisters and I had an interesting conversation in which we discussed fan fiction vs books and the merits and flaws of each. One sister prefers fan fiction, two prefer books, and one likes neither.

    I’ll let you guess which is which.

    We equally had some bopping tunes, including but not limited to Calum Hood, flowerovlove, and Renee Rapp. But since RAYE also played, I made clear my absolute h a t e for scatting, something that just rankles me. I was rankled.

    I am a very delicate noble flower, I listen only to the orchestra, or perhaps at times, a wandering minstrel.

    No hate to RAYE though!

    As we applied sunscreen to our gorgeous faces, Mum broke the news: biscuit time would be limited. It was quite funny to me how they gently broke the news, as if worried that we would order they be beheaded. It was all “me and dad had a talk last night” and “we had to agree that”.

    (Fun fact, Louis XVI is rumoured to have helped invent the guillotine, the very instrument of his death. I love the french revolution).

    But yeah we have too many biscuits. We need to cut down.

    And finally came time to exit the house!! Mum panicked because she couldn’t find her shoe, and then we all laughed when in fact it was in her hand.

    Especially dad, to be honest.

    And then, finally, f i n a l l y, for real, we were off! The road was long and windy, down a cliff face, or at least it felt like that at times. The twins and Lily questioned how boats float, and I believe the term “boat jesus” was tossed around. *rolls eyes in physics*.

    And once we had arrived at the port, after some terrible harmonising, we stopped for a drink since our boat was in a whole hour or more.

    First of all, we discussed our favourite ships: Destiel, Byler, Wolfstar etc. And then we got distracted by two boys who were about 14, who would just walk back and forth and each time they had a strange new accessory, such as a bottle of beer.

    Tate then said “there’s something about a fit man in uniform that I like”, which, honestly, is understandable, but that prompted us to talk about firemen and then I told the story of the guy in France who saved a family from a fire, and now is being helped to get citizenship.

    Dad took this opportunity to tell is about a family in a fire who were told by the fireman to chuck their baby and he would catch it saying it was alright because he was a goalkeeper in the football league.

    The couple then threw their baby and he caught it, bounced it twice, and threw it up the pitch.

    Once we had stopped laughing, Lily told me that she pictured the whole thing as Baby Verstappen, and then she laughed some more as I imitated it.

    Some guy was doing bicep curls with his girlfriend’s suitcase and we all judged him harshly. It was rather weird.

    But then to keep us occupied I proposed the game where two people say any word at the same time, and then based on the two words said they try to find common ground and say the same word at the same time, and you keep going until you do get the same word.

    If you did not understand my explanation, blame not my poor communication skills, instead… uh… it’s a game for nobles. Peasants wouldn’t get it. Sorry!

    Anyway, Lily and I played, and at one point she said Aaron Burr, and I said Mercedes. And, perhaps I am an idiot, a fool, but I feel that the common ground between the two is f a i r l y obvious. Aaron Burr shot Hamilton, a different Hamilton drove for Mercedes in F1…

    Lily, in all her infinite wisdom, that I must not understand, said *Lewis* Hamilton. I simply said Hamilton. Because the other was Alexander Hamilton.

    So yeah, we didn’t succeed.

    But then! Our boat arrived, so we rushed to the front of the queue, and in memory of our funny video last year, decided to rush Lily to the front of the queue.

    She takes her job very, v e r y seriously. She was first on the boat, passing some absolute cheats that was a group of men.

    But the seats were assigned so it was no matter. Dad did, however, get to be among the first in the queue for food, but Lily and I joined him and asked for a cinnamon roll.

    We should never have asked.

    We must repent everyday for the pain and suffering we caused to our father. I feel more regret and remorse than I have ever imagined.

    You see, because of our question, the waiter thought we were still deciding, and served someone else before us. Dad will never get back that precious minute of time. Our actions are inexcusable, which he let us know.

    Lily and I feel shame to our very souls.

    Anyway, on the boat, I read and Lily watched F1, I have no idea what the twins were doing, at some point we went to the outside, but yeah. It was chill.

    Upon descending the boat, we sang an acapella rendition of a night to remember, from high school musical, and then we were told to look for a sign with dad’s name on it. Dad placed a bet on which car was ours, I said if he was wrong he owed me five euros, if he was right I would compose a paragraph in his honour in my blog.

    Paul Birkett Casswell Simpson. What is there to say? How to put into the words the magnitude of his talent? None other could pick out the one six seater car and deduce it would be ours. No one else could then talk to the guy with his name on a sign, organise who would drive, and then drive the car to our house, through small, winding streets. What a man. It is an honour to be his daughter.

    Who do you think won?

    Anyway, so we drove through the streets and mum and dad argued a little because they got a bit lost, and during the drive I was sort of biting the end of my hair, I don’t know why, it’s not a habit I’ve ever picked up.

    Lily found this too disgusting to even happen in her presence, tried to parent me into stopping, of course that made me want to continue, and at some point as mum and dad argued, Lily shouted at me and yanked my plait out my mouth, and Mum and Dad both shouted at her, leading to, drumroll please, grumpy Lily!

    And that got worse when we got to the house, we all got out, the hosts started to show us around, and at some point we all came to the slow, quiet, realisation that yes, the hosts would be staying in the house too. Sure, it was a different apartment, but it is fairly awkward to be using their pool that they can’t use? And of course it is a little unnerving for the average teenage girl to have four random strangers that you didn’t expect, able to wander into the garden at any moment while you’re swimming.

    And, well, we’re nobles, we simply don’t s h a r e. *shudders in Versailles*

    So Lily got well upset with it, in sister solidarity and vague discomfort I also refused to swim, but the other four seemed to have no qualms.

    We decided to go to a bakery and supermarket to get some stuff, and, well, we did. Yeah. Exciting stuff.

    On the way back, Allegra analysed a line of K Pop that I have always mocked (“a lonely leaf sits right next to me”) and I had to be impressed. Of course it will never compare to Taylor Swift’s “autumn leaves falling down like pieces into place” but still.

    And on the way home I managed to connect to bluetooth, and took requests. Lily asked for Sapphire, an Ed Sheeran song, and for some reason mum found this to be a personal affront to her. She really gave us the sense that we had failed as children for wanting to listen to a song, and it all ended when she skipped it halfway through, in a rather childish manner.

    This sparked yet another argument. Too many for my delicate noble ears.

    When we came home, my sisters and I played cards, and many a funny moment was had, laughter was at times hysterical. For example, Allegra kept threatening to spit water at me since I was across from her. And at some point, I played betty by Taylor Swift, Allegra begged me to skip it, I refused, something made Allegra laugh as she drank, so she spat her mouthful if water at me, and some landed on my phone and *skipped the song*.

    I was so impressed that I didn’t even play it again.

    But then we got ready to go out for dinner, some nice pictures were taken, and we were off!

    Allegra made some funny joke about Louis 14 as we walked to the place. I can’t quite remember what, something about some house being his castle, anyway.

    At the place, we felt so much like intruders because it was pretty much exclusively families with small children, it felt like we had walked in on a family barbecue. But with the confidence of brits who love to colonise, we strode in with our heads held high, and ordered a lot of greek salads.

    The sunset was pretty awesome to look at, the sun was huge and red, pictures can’t quite capture the beauty.

    Mum at some point said, “look at all my girls” to which Allegra relied with no hesitation, “I know, we’re so pretty”.

    We chuckled.

    And now, the moment that those who come from dad’s blog have been waiting for.

    During dinner, at some point Lily was burping. Now, if you know Allegra, you know she finds it pretty gross. She told Lily to stop, Lily made fun of her, and in a real stroke of genius, Allegra then said “yeah? Well you can’t stand it if I do this” and then dramatically and hilarious pretended to eat my hair.

    Dad just about burst out into laughter, I have never seen the man laugh so much. Lily was just gaping, we were all laughing, and maybe it doesn’t seem funny on the blog, but I think you had to be there to see Allegra’s exact movements and Lily’s gobsmacked face, not quite computing that Allegra had used her weakness against her and that we were all making fun of her.

    I then brought up that fact that I thought women weren’t in F1 for physical, physiological, like scientific reasons, as dad had told me once I’m sure. I was then hated on and called sexist as I desperately tried to explain that I did not believe this; Lily decided to look up if a woman had ever been in F1.

    And now for moment number two. For reference, we sometimes make vaguely misogynistic jokes, but as a joke. And only amongst ourselves, we aren’t actually sexist guys.

    But Lily said “actually, a woman did drive in the qualifications for F1 in 1951”, and Allegra replied in a tone of utmost confusion and inability to understand how this had come about, said, “why, was she lost?”

    And if you know my father, you know he can appreciate some expertly delivered misogynistic jokes.

    He was shaking with laughter, wiping tears of mirth from his eyes even minutes later, as Allegra proclaimed that her ego was going to get too big.

    It was a hilarious moment.

    Once again, to clarify, not a one of us thinks women can’t compete in F1.

    Anyway.

    We walked home in the dark, it was peaceful and very funny , and when we returned we realised that the hosts were not here, so my sisters and I joyously jumped in the pool. It was hilariously funny, but sadly I shan’t disclose the exact reason for the laughter.

    We did freak out some stray cats though, by lining up to crab walk along the side of the pool every time they moved, so they got quite worried I think.

    After that, we headed up to hang with our parents, and a nice relaxing end to a strange day.

    And so this is where we pause our trek up Mount Olympus, folks.
    Bye family!!!
    Les mer

  • Once again, I am a god

    18. juli, Hellas ⋅ 🌙 26 °C

    Welcome one, welcome all, back to Mount Olympus!

    Many a time I have returned to this page that you now read, trying to find a sentence to begin.

    I have failed, so I figured I could just open with that.

    Writing the blog can’t be good for me. I shall simply crack under the pressure like an egg from the annoying chickens in the garden, and then where will we be? Blogless and rubyless.

    Actually an egg was a bad example, their form is so structurally sound that they were imitated to create a very tall building in Abu Dhabi, Capital Gate I believe.

    I am a fount of knowledge that lacks commitment.

    But yeah! So I woke up today, largely unhappy, since my bed should not be called a bed. At risk of being considered as being in poor taste, I would say it’s an affront to the Geneva Convention. It felt like lying on metal slats that dig into my back.

    Thinking that I had surely had the worst sleep, I emerged prepared to complain, and was i m m e d i a t e l y thwarted by Lily who told me that at around 3 am she awoke to go to the toilet, but as soon as she opened the door a crack her brain terrorised her, as brains are known to do. Her mind was flooded with images of a movie we watched on Halloween, the Visit I think it’s called, and yeah. She couldn’t leave. Or sleep.

    So she watched F1 until morning.

    And do you know what’s annoying? I have a list of things that happened in the day, but I rarely give myself enough context to understand what I mean. I just have “dad mocking me” which, like, is a common occurence. So.

    Afterwards, I finally caved and did sport with my sisters, because Lily promised me that she would watch Hamilton with me if I did sport with them. So I’m gonna hold her to that.

    But it has to be said I am a god at sport.

    Afterwards, the chickens that live in the garden kept being so loud and just repeatedly sound like they’re choking, which is why dad hilariously said “are you hiccuping, Lily?”

    Those who get it, get it, those who don’t, don’t.

    After sport and jokes, Allegra and I made ourselves some aesthetic açai bowls as best as we could, because they had coconut bowls!

    Allegra and I were so relaxed. Never had I been more chill. Small talk, polite laughter, calm music, the likes.

    Cut to, movie style, Lily basically in the trenches, switching between two phones, three credit cards, half crazed, hands through her hair, on the verge of angry tears.

    That’s right, kids! Lily fought in the great Ticketmaster battle of 2025!

    Basically, she managed to secure us tickets to see sombr!! Everyone say thank you Lily!

    After that fateful day, I retired to write my blog from yesterday, as my sisters tanned by the pool. It seems Lily has abandoned her earlier reservations about the pool I suppose.

    That took me hours, and then it was lunch time, so we had fried eggs from the chickens in the garden, which was rather tasty.

    And at the end of lunch, I felt very self important because mum and dad read my blog from yesterday and they laughed a lot. Hihihi. Once again, I am a god.

    We then got ready for our day, aka going to a beach, so getting ready was fairly simple and included putting on sunscreen.

    And then we were off! I was lucky to be in the middle seat instead of the back, and once again I had the music, but I decided to play it safe and put on the family blend. This meant that I got to hear the greatest song of all time.

    Mr Brightside by The Killers.

    No, I will not be taking questions nor will I debate on this frankly indisputable fact.

    Also on the drive, it is worth noting that e Greece there are petrol stations called Eko, and my whole family thinks it is the height of comedy to say, “I think I’ve heard that station before”.

    I am included.

    And then we were at the beach!! Mum and dad went to buy some umbrellas because it was damn sunny, and my sisters and I joyfully swam in the crystal clear aquamarine water. We alternated between tanning (or lying to ourselves in some cases- I will never tan. I burn. I am an English rose and I blame my mother for my skin), and swimming. We played some very fun games, including the beached whale game, where you lie where the sand meets the sea and the waves push and pull you and sometimes flip you.

    I believe the twins’ exact words were, “losers”. They didn’t play.

    We then were all climbing on each other and trying not to drown. Also very fun.

    But my head was begin to ache and my skin was beginning to burn, and we did pack up and leave since it was getting to be around 4:30.

    On the way home, we stopped at a supermarket, bought some goodies and snacks, and then, dad betrayed us because he m a d e us go back to the car, promised it was open, so we crossed the road and it *wasn’t*. So we had to wait outside, looking like fools, as dad moseyed his way around the shop.

    But then we were home! I updated myself on the goings on in the world (I love to be informed and I love being the aforementioned fount of knowledge, keeping my sisters informed), as my sisters played cards/swam, and we listened to some more bopping tunes.

    We did finish the two little toblerones that we had bought at the supermarket, but who cares. Such is life. Chocolate is good.

    For some reason, Tate had a towel on her head, obstructing her peripheral vision. And Allegra got up at some point. Tate turned to say something, but noticed Allegra was not there. She then exclaimed in an accented voice, “oh no! Olgra de Bolgra be gone!”. Lily and I found this to be the height of comedy, Tate can do no wrong.

    For reference, Olgra the Bolgra is what we call Allegra. Much like how Allegra calls me Rumple, to my chagrin.

    But the fun times soon came to an end, since Lily was reading One Day, a tragic book, and she wept all the tears in her little heart. Of course, I gave her a comforting hug, but those who know me know my deep seated, all encompassing, utter disgust for tears. I cannot stand them.

    That made comforting Lily quite hard.

    Mum and dad during this time were making a yummy dinner which ended up a-mazing. I do recommend eating food made by mum that is a tomato and cheese and veggie mix. Tis real good.

    As they chopped things, I finally got into a comfortable seat, announced this, and within moments Mum asked me to get up. Of course, as a dutiful daughter, I did get the plate she asked for, but equally evidently, being a theatrical child, I exclaimed “I feel betrayed by the woman I once called mother!”.

    Mother had no empathy for my plight.

    Unsurprising, since, when Lily was crying, mum said, “Lily, if you can’t ha ha handle the book don’t re re read the book”, as her only words of comfort.

    Mum is a savage.

    We were all perplexed.

    Fearing the same treatment, I kept my tears secret, having mastered the art of the silent, tears sliding-down-the-face, movie kind of cry, when I reached the end of my tragic book and cried.

    As we ate our top tier dinner, we discussed the original plans that were to go to the live music show at the place where we ate yesterday, but in the end we voted on not going, first of all because we could hear the music from here, and second of all, we were all in swim suits or pjs.

    And we’re lazy.

    Mum decided her dinner wasn’t getting enough appreciation despite the lavish praise we all gave it, and so she mocked dad’s melancholy sigh. We all laughed.

    Now, I can’t recall what exactly lead to this moment, but at some point I was staring at Mum with a joking evil eye kinda look, and Lily said, “oooh, stare off!” To which I replied, “I can’t stare off with a blind woman” (maybe mum disagreed on something I find obvious? Who knows).

    Mum then sang a rendition of Anti-Hero, with a few changed lyrics here and there, which left me more and more gobsmacked, until it culminated in, “I would stare in the mirror but I’m blind so I can’t”.

    I had to hold back my applause. I could not hold back the bewildered stare.

    And finally, we discussed our plans for tomorrow, talking about visiting temples for Apollo and Demeter. I again showed off my fount of knowledge-ness by demonstrating by capacity to name a good amount of Greek gods and their functions, as well as a few myths.

    Once more, I am a god. At gods. A god of gods?

    Anyway.

    However despite me talking the big talk, I rarely check my facts, and may mix things up at times. It comes with knowing a lot of random stuff. Like I said to Lily, never trust something coming out my mouth. I will say it with confidence. I will have no proof.

    The conversation concluded with us agreeing that Apollo was God of Allegra’s butt. So. Do with that what you will.

    And then came the time for me to write the blog. It was late, and mum and dad kept joking that I always say “I need to write the damn blog” at late times, and then Lily said they should take bets as to what time I would say it tomorrow.

    I was hurt. I am willing to say it at a specific time to split the profits with a winner.

    But as you may have guessed, based on the beginning of my blog, I had trouble starting, but at one point I said I couldn’t do something because I was writing the blog, when mum dramatically pointed at me, gasped, and said, “you’re not writing the blog, you cheeky sod, you’re reading your newspaper!”

    And alas, I was. I had just told them about the tourist that ate the 6,2 million dollar duck-taped banana.

    Really, I was hoisted by my own petard there.

    Anyway, as I am rather tired due to my terrible sleep, and I faced a lack of motivation, this blog is certainly not among my best.

    Sorry!!

    Also please forgive spelling mistakes. I am well tired.

    And so this is where we pause our trek up Mount Olympus, folks.
    Bye family!!!
    Les mer

  • Five Years Time

    19. juli, Hellas ⋅ ☀️ 28 °C

    Welcome one, welcome all, back to Mount Olympus!

    And perhaps we are closer to the greek gods than we have ever been: today, we visited the Temple of Apollo!

    I would like to open this blog by announcing that my father and eldest sister are monumental meanies.

    Fine, they are TURDS.

    They are telling me I an unfunny. So. I said I would block them on Find Penguins.

    One cannot block another on Find Penguins. So I am simply exposing their flaws in the foreword.

    Take that, meanies!!

    (Coming back to the foreword to mention that dad USED MY JOKE IN HIS BLOG. After he TOLD ME IT WASN’T FUNNY. >:|. See if we’re still friends after that, dad. I expect an apollogy.)

    Foreword over.

    In Foreword the Second, I would like to note that I do, at times, take things out of context when writing the blog, either to make us seem more interesting and funny, or simply because I forget.

    And so I must say that one anonymous reader and member of the trip has felt offended, nay, insulted, by my depiction.

    Sorry mum!

    Mum is not a bad mum, she did comfort Lily yesterday while she cried. Her funny comment was only afterwards when Lily started being rude because she was sad.

    Foreword the Second, over!

    Now, I must commence the day by saying, thanks Lily, for taking the bad bed.

    I must continue by saying, curse you Lily, for giving me images of the movie that freaked you out last night.

    I swear, I was traumatised, I could not close my eyes, and like, every time I moved I had to make sure I was under the covers completely, lest I be attackable.

    I barely slept. I could only read ao3 to try and distract myself.

    (Oh, and for Tim: ao3 is a website where one can read or write fan-fiction for free. I would say there are millions, in every fandom that exists. Some of them are really, really good and book length. So yeah.)

    Anyway.

    I woke up in the morning and it was EQUALLY TRAUMATISING since I had slept very little and dreamt even less so I was still in a state of fight or flight. And I woke to Lily standing over me, unmoving.

    My heart has never beaten faster upon a wakeup.

    But I decided to read peacefully to calm down and chill.

    Which was immediately thwarted by the sook Lily who wheedled me into getting out of my comfy bed and made me go shopping with her and dad.

    I did bagsie the front seat though. So hahaha take that, sook Lily. The two of us mused about the excessive speed of Greek drivers. However, Dad is also a speedy driver, we learnt. I feared for my life multiple times.

    We did discuss the hilarious Coldplay concert moment: the CEO and HR of a company. If you know you know.

    On the way back, Noah and the Whale’s Five Years Time came on. I immediately and profusely professed my dislike for this song (I have no real problem with it, but I said it once and now I have to stick to my guns.) however it is a nice, happy, chill song.

    Upon our return, Tate had Korean lessons, and the rest of us sisters did sport (I was actually forced to partake; I didn’t plan on it) and then yoga (I didn’t really partake in that; Cassandra made us do ab exercices so I flopped onto the mat in retaliation).

    Lily and I wriggled from a beetle afterwards. You see, a thick ahh beetle was flying around, and it kept coming near us, but we were sitting in chairs. Too lazy to get up, we simply wriggled at high speeds to stop it from landing on us.

    We looked like fools; we laughed like kings.

    Essentially, we chilled and did nothing until lunch, since Tate’s Korean ended rather late anyway. During this time, Dad had a laugh at me for my, shall I say, distinguished and refined language, such as “despise”. Gentle readers, am I at fault for using a level of speaking far superior to that of the common rabble?

    I think not.

    When dad came out for lunch, Lily very harshly said “wow, I do feel like you’ve gotten fatter!” Which is like, really mean and Dad took offence but we all laughed.

    It was all in good fun, worry not.

    After lunch, I showered which is really awkward because it is a bath shower, but handheld, and no shower curtain or anything. So you have to crouch in the bath.

    It’s not fun, altogether.

    *waves my hands like a conductor as you chorus*

    After I showered, we got ready, out on sunscreen etc, and realised that all of us had white skirts!

    Except dad. Really letting the side down, there.

    As we got into the car, Five Years Time came on again, and I mentally declared it the song of the trip.

    No one else knows this, they are finding out now.

    Last year it was Dancing in the Moonlight, a timeless bop.

    Anyway, Lily was quite outraged yesterday when I didn’t mention that she makes the “I think I’ve heard that petrol station before” joke about others, such as Shell. Everyone give it up for Lily!!

    Anyway, we arrived at the Apollo temple and it was fairly cool, I do love ancient history, history and all that. It is perhaps the most fascinating thing.

    While we were there, Lily and I theorised that, were we in a novel, one of us would step across the threshold of the archway and be transported back to the times when they built it and then we would be the one to overthrow the tyrant who actually was ruling at the time of it’s creation.

    Anyway.

    Afterwards, we decided to have a little stroll through town, through the “old market street” as I believe it was called. We saw some cool shops, the roads were all super quaint and greek looking and honestly, despite the heat and the thirst, a good time was had by all.

    Oh, and we bought a magnet!

    At some moment, Dad searched for mum worriedly. In his eyes was his fear of the future: he had lost his wife to the crowds, he was a single father, how would he raise four girls without their mother?

    But before he could panic too much we all laughed at him because mum was like, right next to him.

    Dad did not seem to see the funny side.

    Also! It is worth noting that some things, thanks to their having been immortalised in the blog, have become a *thing*. Often, when someone can’t read a word properly, we say [blank] one, dyslexics nil. And also, when anything ends with cruise, we say “Tom Cruise’s [enter family member]”.

    We’re timelessly funny like that.

    Anyway, Allegra said “hey guys, it’s Tom Cruise’s crossword”. Perplexed as to why she didn’t pick a family member, I turned to look, and it was actually Tom Cruise’s face on a crossword.

    A twist in our classic joke! Another classic joke was born!

    But after perhaps an hour or so of wandering, I have no real concept of time and honestly I don’t think anyone does? In my mind it’s like temperature. Like how much is one degree??? Anyway. I’m getting off track. We began to get really really thirsty, so we stopped at the fiftieth place we passed (the other 49 were deigned not good enough by Lily), and we had a nice drink.

    Hihihi, *giggles mischievously* I also had a bloody mary despite being under the legal drinking age! Hahaha those two months make all the difference hehehe I am a criminal!!

    Teehee.

    And then the time came to head home, and we wandered through some more backroads, in which Tate said she could picture James Bond driving through in a motorbike, which, fair. Accurate.

    We passed a supermarket, and tried to go in, but sadly it was closed. And I was super thirsty, so the only thing that could’ve cheered me up was another supermarket. Nothing else.

    Lily then proved me wrong by walking straight into a street-sign.

    I laughed greatly; I am a sucker for stupid comedy. She blustered her way through a defence: “I didn’t walk into it, I just became aware of it in a brutal way”.

    And then, in case that wasn’t good enough, we did see another supermarket!

    Only good thing about parking so far away.

    In the supermarket, the twins filmed a bunch of funny videos, and I was Spiderman: I could tell that Lily was going to knock something so I payed attention, and when a box of pastry fell off the shelf, I caught it at an angle without looking.

    Yes I got pics. I accept applause.

    Anyway, I also learned today something that actually really interested me, since I do love history and myths and stuff. Imma tell you.

    Ok so it took place after Achilles died, and a woman had a son, Bophades, and she wanted him to be invincible, but without an obvious weakness, and so when she dipped him in the river she held him not by the ankle but by the groin, since it was always more protected in armor and such.

    So yeah, I bet you’ve heard of Achilles heel but I bet you hadn’t heard of Bophades nuts.

    Hihi!!!

    I apologise to any sensitive eyes.

    But yeah I told that joke to Lily, she found it funny and made me out it in the blog

    Also special mention for when Allegra seemed to forget how to speak and said to me, and I quote, “there’s a bidjodl juice here, it’s spokin me”.

    When we got home, we swam in the pool. Lily refused. Oh, she was also well unhappy with me when I wrote yesterday that she compromised her morals. Apparently she did not.

    But I got a little chilly, so I did get out and Lily and I went upstairs. I accidentally flipped over her cap that contains rings. I know, how foolish of me, I should have *known* that the cap is not for wearing, but is a glorified jewellery box.

    Or so Lily said.

    And then she made me look all over for the one missing ring. One ring to rule them all.

    Don’t know why I said that.

    But then the two of us consumed a whole tin of dolmades by ourselves. We decided to blame the chickens, the flying chickens. At some point Lily decided it was reasonable to sing the suspicious Spiderman tune, the one that’s like dadadadaDAADaaaa, but as a chicken. So, BokabokaBAAKAAAA.

    As Tate said, how much alcohol was in our Radlers?

    Anyway, then mum and dad joined us outside to make dinner, a yummy greek salad (or, in this country, a yummy salad), and we switched the music.

    We did eat some well spicy peppers from the garden, they were among the spiciest I have consumed and I am fairly chill (i) with high levels of spice.

    And then poor Allegra touched her eye.

    I think she’s still crying.

    Anyway, we then made toasties as is the greek way, we had to plug in the machin to a wall, and I was appointed as the manager of this.

    I called it Ruby’s Bonfire. I know, I know, hold your applause. I am soooo imaginative.

    While eating, Lily had a coughing fit, and so drank Allegra’s drink, lemon juice. Allegra then said “ey, that’s my lemon” to which I said in an italian accent, “eya, that’s a my-a lemon”, and then dad just really surprised us all and said “eya, mamma mia” which was super random.

    Allegra watched all this, unimpressed, and said “no, it’s still my lemon though.”

    We laughed.

    After dinner, we ended the day playing cards, the game Bullshit to be exact, and at one point, Tate said to our mother “you lied earlier you little twerp!”

    Now if you know Tate you know it is impossible to take offence at this statement, Tate would be the last person to ever be rude to mum. The tone was lighthearted. Mum laughed.

    But the rest of us did jump to mum’s defence.

    And yeah, a fun time was had, good music was played (I did rap the whole of Guns and Ships flawlessly but no one was impressed), and then we all went to bed.

    Well, I am still writing this blog at 12:21 and praying that my brain won’t terrorise me by conjuring horror images like it did last night.

    Does anyone know why brains do that??

    Anyway.

    And so this is where we pause our trek up Mount Olympus, folks.
    Bye family!!!
    Les mer

  • This is grate!

    20. juli, Hellas ⋅ 🌙 26 °C

    Welcome one, welcome all, back to Mount Olympus!

    I have just started the blog again; I wrote it a first time but I’m feeling rather listless, as I said to my family to a chorus of mocking “melancholy sigh”.

    I really shot myself in the foot there.

    Anyway, my first blog was very spiritless and ultimately not a fun read, so here goes round 2!

    I woke up this morning in a less terrifying way than just having Lily stand over me. It was just Allegra saying “rumple, time to get up!” And then “put your hands in the air”. So, in my fatigued state, I did put my hands in the air, and Allegra laughed because she had apparently just done the same to Tate.

    Anyway.

    (Side note, mum just made me turn down my sad boi music :( what am I to do?)

    Anyway, they tried to get me to do sport but I really wasn’t feeling it, and today I did not cave under the wheedling and insults! Yay me and perseverance!

    Instead I happily enjoyed an açai bowl that I made (I say açai bowl- that is simply the closest descriptor. It is literally greek yoghurt and granola and cherry. So.)

    During breakfast, dad needles me about having called him out for thievery in yesterday’s blog- which is something he did! I am the one who made the Apollogise joke, Lily said “it sounds like a title of dad’s blog”, and dad said “no, because I only put funny stuff in my blog”.

    And then they both laughed at me. I made my peace with it; I am not the funny one of the family, it’s true, I am used to it.

    But then he used it in his blog, and was even commended for it!!! And like, I’m not just going to let that slide.

    I felt the rage of all my female ancestors who have suffered a MAN stealing THEIR WORK so. Yeah. Obviously I was gonna call him out. Even if it was only over a simple joke. That’s where it starts, but soon enough he’ll just be copy and pasting my blog to his site if I don’t put a stop to this folly.

    Brief moment over.

    Lily and I joked about how I’m “a goofball” because I made some jokes in my blog yesterday and I kept writing “teehee”. I replied, “you can’t take me a n y w h e r e”

    We laughed.

    Mum and dad announced that we were leaving in an hour and a half, so naturally I read my book for about forty minutes. But when mum’s evil eye started getting a little too intense, I did get up and get ready.

    Mum smiled happily.

    Surprisingly, in a feat that no one expected the Simpsons to be able to do, we did make it to the car before our hour and a half was up!!

    *pauses for applause*

    Thank you, thank you. Anyway, as we took off in our lil car, Deniece Williams “Let’s hear it for the boy” came on.

    Lily massacred that song. She knows the words, but somehow she got basically every single one wrong. It was like a feat of nature, or perhaps divine intervention that was preventing her from getting a single line right.

    I was almost impressed, I have to say.

    As we drifted through the greek countryside, bop after bop came on. “I know what you did last summer” by Shawn Mendes and Camilla Cabello played, leading to a discussion on how they should have been endgame, and how the song could have been about a murder.

    Anyway.

    Demeter’s temple was actually pretty cool. If you know me, you know I love history, archeology, mythology etc, so I was rather happy to be there. I couldn’t understand why some parts looked brand new- I formes a few theories but the museum offered no insight.

    It was really cool though.

    After that, we drove up to a little town and had a wander around looking for a bakery/restaurant. We passed an abundance of the latter, but we weren’t really feeling it, so we headed back to the car after a brief stop in the one bakery to get some snacks for later.

    They were cinnamonish biscuits, but they did look like poops. So we referred to them as poops.

    Ladies and gents, come to Ruby’s Blog if you’re looking for the height of highbrow humour!

    We then had a stroll around another town, at which point Allegra said that mum had a “horizontal butt” that was the “biggest on planet earth” but “in a good way”.

    I don’t think mum took offence, in any case I did ask if I could write about it on the blog, to which she grudgingly agreed.

    Never let it be said that you don’t get full transparency on this blog I guess!

    We eventually found a place to stop for lunch, and they had a very cute isolated six seat table sort of across the street, under a tree, and so we sat there.

    However, we were under a fig tree which had cheese graters hanging on it. This was not good.

    It lead to jokes. “This is grate!” “You should be grateful” and the like.

    Our jokes could have been feta, to brie honest.

    Hihi!

    But it did make us think of A Marvelous Christmas and the Egg Yokes. So. It wasn’t all bad.

    During lunch, mum and dad launched a Serious Discussion™️ about our attitudes and Greece and activities and stress.

    As we are all unserious people who can’t deal with criticism (yes, this is a character flaw, we know) we made quite a few jokes as well.

    Anyway.

    Since we were under a tree, cicadas were rife. And soon enough, we began to hear an annoying high-pitched whine nearby. We noticed a cicada sitting on a branch right over Tate’s head. She began to truly panic at this, and lay on the side, began like, fake-panic-crying.

    We all sort of ignored it for as long as we could, until dad took pity, and in a move that terrorised us all, he stood and swiped it off the branch.

    We all feared that it would fall on us, so we sort of screamed, but after a couple of loops, it flew away.

    The annoying whine didn’t leave though… that was Allegra’s talking.

    Just kidding just kidding.

    After a couple of fun rounds of “we are young” and raising the closest thing, we said goodbye to the restaurant and made our way back to the car.

    I swindled my way at into the middle seat, whereas by rights it was Tate’s turn. I stoically ignored her heartbroken look as I jerked my head to the back of the car, but I came clean to everyone as soon as we started driving, plagued by my wrongdoings.

    They could not forgive me, as they shouldn’t. Tate’s puppy dog eyes still echo in my soul.

    Anyway.

    The rest if the day was rather uneventful. We made it to the same beach as two days ago, my sisters and I went into the water which was very choppy with the wind. We reprised our game of “wheee” in the waves, and if you bend one leg when you jump it feels like you’re Peter Pan. I really do recommend.

    Allegra kept trying to see if any of the windsurfers were good looking, going in about blond hair and biceps or whatever.

    It was quite funny.

    And then my sisters tanned a little to dry off, but I find tanning to be boring sometimes so instead I just let my towel billow in the wind and I felt like a superhero, so that was also quite fun. Again, I recommend.

    We drive home soon enough, stopped briefly at the supermarket, and then everyone went to hang by the pool of our house.

    I read a lot, so did Lily, and Allegra after she got out. Tate chose to tan as my parents did lengths.

    And then it was back inside to pack a little since we have an early start tomorrow.

    Or at least, mum did.

    After that preemptive organisation, we chilled outside, not much going on. I think we were all rather tired already.

    At some point I asked mum for a biscuit, at which point she evil-eyed me intensely, and said “only if you call it by its proper name!” Which I had forgotten, until she showed me the shape, and I remembered. “Ah yes. Sh*ts,” I said, at which point mum nodded, placated, and handed me the poop.

    I later got out stuff to make toasties, or in my case, a sandwich, and Lily and I discussed whether the twins were crazy because if their age, their generation, or because they were twins.

    Results: inconclusive.

    Anyway.

    Perhaps we all partake in the crazy, because as we judged Tate’s outfit it was concluded that she looked like “a boat boy selling lemons”, at which point Tate stood up and joyously proclaimed, “one dollar a lemon, ding ding ding!”

    We laughed.

    And finally for tonight I should mention that Allegra said “chicken chicken winner dinner” and not winner winner chicken dinner, which I find objectively hilarious.

    But yeah! I then say down to write the blog as the twins learnt some dance, Lily watched har favourite youtubers, and so was life.

    I was feeling well tired and a lil melancholy as you do on occasion so I was listening to sad music. As you do.

    But yeah! Now I am feeling more energetic but sadly it is close to midnight. So.

    And so this is where we pause our trek up Mount Olympus, folks.
    Bye family!!!
    Les mer

  • Modern art. Cluck cluck.

    21. juli, Hellas ⋅ 🌙 26 °C

    Welcome one, welcome all, back to Mount Olympus!

    And yes, today was a fabled travelling day. If you have read the first blog I ever partook in, then you know I used to hate writing about them.

    But not anymore!!!

    Why, I hear you ask?

    Well, dear subjects, we don’t do so much in these days. But there are still funny moments!! Yayyyyyy!

    Anyway, onto the blog.

    I was entirely exhausted when I woke up way too early. Once again, I had a terrible sleep, so the 6:30 alarm in the form of a parent was not fun.

    Breakfast was delicious, or as I like to say, Lee Dicious, my old school friend, it was greek yoghurt and granola. What more could you ask for??

    Well, except soja vanille of course. I will always ask for that.

    We were all rather efficient, in that Mum was efficient and I stayed out of her way, at some point Lily was saying how I was “too easy to wind up” because of something she did, but worry not, karma was swift (hehe) and I got her back, even quoting herself: “you’re too easy to wind up”.

    Fun times!

    Now, as we left, we noticed that Allegra looked like she might work on a cruise ship, with a white shirt, a blue skirt, and a white cap. So. That is obviously a very important thing that happened in our day.

    Only quality reports from my blog! The m o s t interesting things and nothing else!! Whoop whoop!

    I am highly energetic sorry guys. I had an eight minute power nap that was over an hour long. So.

    Now, I came across a hilarious reel on instagram that was a version of Iris by the goo goo dolls, but every instrument was replaced by the guy doing an impression of a chicken.

    I can say that it was the closest to heaven that I’ll ever be. Modern art. Cluck cluck.

    Video included for your enjoyment.

    We played it on the bluetooth, and dad just chuckled through it. It was quite funny.

    But sadly like all good things it came to an end, much like our car drive, and we were at our ferry!

    That left in an hour!

    So we simply sat in the waiting room and everyone but me and Lily went to get hot chocolate, which was delectable but I didn’t actually want any.

    As we waited, an old man came through playing clarinet and then singing “popopo maria, popopo maria” over and over and honestly, props to him. It was very vibe setting.

    Sadly I had no coins. Not in this economy.

    Now, it is worth noting that we had a bunch of vegetables in like, a bin bag that we were taking to our next place.

    And someone had to carry the bag.

    I did n o t want it to be me. I am a teenager after all, we’re *supposed* to be obsessed with how people perceive us, and “carrier of vegetables in a bin bag” was not my look for the day. But the only way I could get out of it, was by carrying the computer bag.

    It is rather heavy.

    Now, as we got on the ferry, Lily leading the charge as usual, I squeezed past a family, notably, a small girl who was like six. I thought I had dine an excellent job of discreetly passing by, and so did not look back until Allegra caught up with me.

    Apparently, the rather heavy computer bag had hit the girl and I hadn’t realised.

    I felt terrible, I looked back and her dad was just staring at me with an affronted face. I was too far away to go back and apologise. I was torn between laughing and feeling bad to be honest.

    But yeah, now I have a reputation of a child-hater, according to my sisters.

    Anyway, we made it to our seats and I was RIGHT IN FRONT OF THE AIRCON which was a little inconvenient because I WAS FREEZING and so yeah. Not the most pleasant trip. However I did read a bopping book, and Lily watched f1, the twins reading or watching a k drama I believe, so it was not all bad.

    At some point the little girl and the dad walked right in front of my seat. I just hoped they didn’t recognise me.

    Lily kept hitting my phone, which J was reading on, and saying “oops, sorry”. So every time she did that I un-reclined her seat (she was very smug that hers was the only one that reclined), which was hilariously funny to me.

    Anyway, ferry done, we hopped off with a spring in our step, walked around a little, then sat at a restaurant and waited for another ferry!

    Yay!!

    While we waited, we discussed a guy that was in the ferry with us and got off in front of us, ordered some lunchables, and read.

    At some point, and this is a funny story, dad said “everyone pay attention”, and Lily, who had her headphones on, said “what is dad saying?”. Dad laughed at the irony, then continued, “I said, everyone pay attention”. Lily still hadn’t been listening, and asked, “what?”

    We laughed.

    Simpson family comedy. Nothing beats it. I should start charging you, we’re that funny.

    I hope the tone of sarcasm is translated through text.

    But the time came, and our ferry arrived, and this time there were no assigned seats, so the stakes were much higher. Lily was very much feeling the pressure of being first on the boat.

    But thankfully for us, Lily was indeed first in, and she scored great seats, far from any monstrous aircon that would leave me shivering.

    What would we do without her?

    Again, for two hours, I read, so did Allegra, Lily watched f1 and Tate watched her kdrama.

    The worst thing really was that we had only one portable charger and four phones in need.

    It was a bloodthirsty battle that ended in a peace treaty of sharing.

    WAIT!

    I forgot to mention!

    I was sitting there, happy as a clam, reading away, when I hear in accented english over a crackly speaker, names being called. Just two or three people, to go to the front desk. I had tuned it out, when I heard, “and Ruby Simpson to the reception desk, please”.

    I literally jumped in my seat. I could not perceive that they had actually asked me to the desk, nor why.

    I turned to face my parents, to confirm thatI had been summoned. Mum just laughed at me.

    As I walked to the desk with dad, my imagination conjured up the worst. Would they make me walk the plank? Like??? Why would I randomly be summoned?? You always hear names getting called but it’s never your own, you know?

    Anyway, turned out my ticket hadn’t been correctly scanned. The more you know!

    As I returned to my seat, I was mainly thankful that it wasn’t that they’d found out about all the drugs I had in my bag.

    Just kidding. Don’t do drugs, kids.

    And two hours later, we stepped off the boat! After a short walk, we made it to our car hire place, got in the car, and soon enough we were driving along, seeing our ferry depart.

    Allegra said that if dad could drive on water, then he would be faster than the ferry, probably to console dad who was h e a r t b r o k e n that the ferry was faster than him.

    So I hilariously said, “jesus take the wheel”.

    I think I was delirious with fatigue at that point, since it’s not that funny.

    Anyway.

    Our place to stay is rather nice, they left us biscuits and drinks and it’s a rather cool place with a nice view. Once we got there, I tried to do my signups for my uni next year, but there is a problem with my bourse, they have me as going to Toulouse, which, please. I am a Parisian girlie at heart.

    Anyway, I kept falling asleep as mum tried to sort it out, so I lay down on the sofa…

    … and missed a whole chunk of the day. Now I believe that everyone but me and Tate (who was also asleep) went out, Allegra said something about being chased by a killer, I don’t know.

    Glad I missed that.

    I woke up when they came back, utterly out of it.

    So I missed what happened for like the next half hour, just drifting in and out of awakeness.

    And then Lily was making dinner, an absolutely delicious lemon and pesto pasta. Mum says she has the casswell genes of making anything from nothing.

    Lily said I had better write elegies about how tasty it was. Here I go.

    O, pasta, O sour pesto pasta, how can I ever bring food to my mouth again if it does not have the distinct flavour from which you were born? You pasta so tender, your vegetables so healthy, your sauce so perfect? I have been blessed to be able to partake in such a meal, and yet cursed since I will spend the rest of my life chasing but another hint of the taste of that meal.

    Anyway, after dinner I began to write the blog, but I quickly got distracted by the Iris clucking video. My sisters and I watched a few, trying to guess the song that was being sung.

    It turns out Allegra is a chicken whisperer. She got so many, so fast. Lily and I could only watch, befuddled, astounded, and dream of having such a useful talent.

    And finally, beds were made, and blogs were finished, and so this is the end of our travelling day.

    And so this is where we pause our trek up Mount Olympus, folks.
    Bye family!!!
    Les mer

  • Spot the difference

    22. juli, Hellas ⋅ 🌙 28 °C

    Welcome one, welcome all, back to Mount Olympus, may you catch the goats that roam freely through life’s journey!

    It is me once again you lucky peeps. Back to regale you with such adventures to inspire and bring joy into your heart.

    Well today started much like the others but I was at least on a bed which was not made of hard metal and the thinnest mattress in the world. Today I woke on a better mattress, but me and Allegra were banished to the front room sofa bed and pull out side bed. Had we done something wrong, I hear you say? Well no, not this time, we were simply the better sisters as Lily insisted that she have her own room and anyone who went against this would have to joust to the bitter end. Olivia did try but then mum ended her potential victory by announcing that Tate had to sleep in the other room on her own. This was proven a genius move by mum, given that Olivia slept until midday. Me and Allegra however d i d n o t. Allegra summised her nights sleep as not great as I kept pulling my rolling bed next to her. Hehe, I did do this, and must say I greatly enjoyed it, and recommend it to all at least one in your life.

    Well later than expected, dad came in to make his routine morning coffee and let me tell you about a very very funny story which arose this fair morning as a result. Thank you coffee routine for bringing this joy into our day.

    So dad spent about 20 minutes trying to work out the fancy Bosh coffee maker and could not make it work at all. To his credit, he was fairly calm about it and like a determined terrier he kept trying again and again. Mum obviously heard this and decided that he might need help as if dad does not get his coffee he can go full Jeckyll and Hyde on us. So mum came out and it took about 2 seconds for mum to make it work. We all laughed heartily at our silly dad and super smart mum.

    The rest of the morning we watched formula 1 racing after we had finally succumbed to Lily’s weeks long advertising campaign, including subliminal messages, to get us to watch it with her. I must say, I was pleasantly surprised and there were plenty of good looking guys to smash and we might just watch some more. But I must interject for a moment to point out that I am the better sister as I have showed interest and also given time to Lily’s obsession for F1 but when I sang a Hamilton song for 5 minutes Lily lost it completely. But mum saved the day again, as mum is the best, and so a possible argument was thwarted.

    So onwards in the day we go, aren’t you lucky to be part of such adventure. Mum and dad and Tate went to the bakery for lunch as myself and Lily and Allegra were being eternally lazy. We had had enough and did not want to be dragged to yet another bakery in the hot hot sun. So we sent off our Sherpas to find food, which they did, and it was yummy. Although I DO NOT like Greek pies they are not as good as mum’s Greek pie and I am now totally sick of them, in fact if I never see a Greek cheese pie again it would be my dream. Sadly I fear tis not to be as we are in the land of cheese and spinach Greek pies so I am sure our paths will cross- DAMN you Greek pie DAMN you!

    Anyway I digress, which I do love to do, and recommend it to one and all regularly.

    At lunch mum and dad tried to get us to say what we wanted to do for the day, but anyone who knows us Simpson girls knows we do not know what we want to do. Mum suggested a lazy day to catch up with work, which somehow segued the conversation into registering for universities and bourses and mum got grumpy with Lily for not registering in time and if you know mum and Lily, you know grumpy begets grumpier so we know not to get involved in a mum and Lily grump-off and just let them get on with it until they had finished their heated discussion

    But this still meant I had to finish my registration which I did and in the process I hired Allegra the family photographer to take amazing photos of me. But she was so good that I was left with a dilemma and choice of which photo to use for my student card. All had their benefits and so I asked the family and dad chose the worst one, mum chose 2 which was no help at all. In the end I chose the mysterious one. So registration done and mum was happy. But that happiness was short lived as she wrote the longest letter to the French bourse explaining why they were so totally useless. I do love it when mum gets cross with companies, I would say she is the queen of complaints. Mum r e a l l y is the best ever I am so glad to have a mum like mine.

    However it has to be said I do have a second mother, being my elder sister Lily. As mum and dad were working, age took over all parenting responsibility and made us all go out to the beach. Finally we were on our own sister adventure braving the mean streets of karavostamo alone. The adventures we had on way to the beach could fill a whole other blog, and sadly I do not have the time to commit to such a story.

    Dad and mum did eventually join us and we had many a special family moment and we were happy to show our parents that we could indeed survive in the wild, having found a space in the rocks in which we built a fort. It has to be said they were most impressed.

    The day ended with a delicious dinner which I am totally lying about as I ate through my shrimp pasta vowing never to order this dish again. I now know I hate shrimp it is the MOST disgusting to eat with having to take their heads and behinds off before consuming. I was not impressed and slightly sick as a result.

    Well I tire of writing this blog now, so with that I will leave you. I also am going to watch the football and wrestle Olivia for the last chocolate biscuit IT WILL BE MINE!

    So I leave you on Mount Olympys followers until tomorrow when I will regale you once more with my excellent wit and unmatched charm.
    Les mer

  • “Don’t put this in the blog”

    23. juli, Hellas ⋅ 🌙 28 °C

    Welcome one, welcome all, back to Mount Olympus, may you catch the goats that roam freely through life’s journey!

    Gosh, it’s been a while since I last sat before my screen to compose.

    “What?” I hear you say. “Hasn’t it been but a day?”

    Well, dear readers, you all seemed to miss the fact that yesterday’s blog was different. First hint: the title. It was “spot the difference”. A clear order, which no one followed. To be fair, very few people commented (shoutout to Ali, everyone’s fave aunt!!). Second, the title was not in the blog at any point.

    “Ahh,” I hear you think (yes I am a mind reader teehee), “that’s happened before, on Guest Star!”

    That’s right, you little geniuses! Yesterday’s blog was entirely written by the one, the only, Jessica Fitzroy Casswell Simpson!

    To be fair she wrote it from my perspective, in the style of my blogs, about my day and not hers.

    But honestly mum slayed, it was so good and so nice and every compliment she wrote about herself is true

    Everyone give a round of applause for Mum!! It was hilarious! I’ve never laughed harder! We were all chuckling in unison!!

    Anyway.

    Back to my blog.

    Today I was woken up by people with no respect. Aka my whole family (excluding Olivia and Allegra). They were loudly making coffee in the kitchen, and breakfast, and I, who had been reading until two in the morning with Allegra, was rather disgruntled at this. Since I sleep in the front room.

    Anyway, I decided to cast this aside and put a spring in my step, joyously making myself some breakfast and then watching Liky and Allegra suffer before me as they do sport, something I am so happy I don’t do.

    They keep being like “we are people who are committed haha, loser” and I level them with my patented unimpressed look, raised eyebrow and all, and say “but I am a happy person who isn’t in pain”.

    They still are floundering for a response.

    I am especially happy because Liky and Allegra listen to a lot of Taylor Swift at this time, free of my influence!

    Anyway, I then was reading the news and updating myself on the happenings of the world, as I sincerely LOVE to do, and I saw that Stephen Colbert said “go f*ck yourself” about Trump.

    So, needless to say, I swear allegiance to him now.

    After their sport, Liky wanted nothing more than to watch some f1, drive to survive. She is nearing the end of the released show at this point.

    As mum said yesterday, I am the better sister, since I watch this with her, but ten seconds of a Hamilton song and suddenly I am the devil.

    Complete with pitchfork and horns!

    As we watched, mum and dad said we had one hour before we had to leave. However, our episode was 50 minutes long, so the four of us shared a look, and came to an agreement.

    We would simply watch the whole episode and the rush for ten minutes.

    So we did, and honestly there was no need to rush since mum and dad were not close to ready.

    It was quite fun though.

    Now shoutout to Dad for helping me remember what my note “Liky and repeating and hamilton and f1” meant. Indeed, Liky always says “hamilton just repeats over and over, I always give you new facts about f1!” And dad then said, “isn’t that what you said yesterday?” Because she did.

    Who’s repeating over and over now?

    But the time came for us to finally leave, much later than target time, and Allegra and I were the unlucky children that had to sig in the back. Now these seats are whatever the opposite of coveted is, despised I suppose, since there is no space and no airflow.

    And on a longish drive, this is not ideal.

    Plus, we both ended up feeling really queasy (a word that I love!).

    It seems that this drive was enjoyable for few of us, since due to the fact that Allegra and I were out of action, we were quite quiet and altogether the Simpson family was having a peaceful, silent-ish drive.

    Expect one of us, who, apparently, can’t deal with silence.

    At some point, Liky just exploded in annoyance and whining and “I hate silence and I hate that it’s hot and I hate long drives!”

    Mum blames the adhd.

    But you know Tate is annoyed when she says “you little twerp!”. Now if you know Tate, you know she is peaceful by nature. But to call Liky a lil’ twerp? That is a testament to the negativity that filled the sweltering car.

    Mum and dad were quite happy though. With their leg room and aircon.

    Have you guys ever seen penguins, the hilarious Madagascar spin-off movie? If you have, then you know the scene I’m thinking of.

    I should move on.

    We drove all the way to Naz beach, but after parking and getting out, and bringing our beach bags to the top of the long path down, we saw the tourists, we saw the smallish size of the beach, we saw the long road down which would likely prove to be a l o n g e r road up, on an unrelated note, I saw some ruins and loved that, and then we promptly turned around.

    Back in the car we were, this time Leg and I were in the middle. We drove to some beaches we had passed on the way, stopped at a pie place that had greek pies (I got a mushroom pie, it tasted like a ratatouille lasagna, which is like my two favourite meals), and once more unto the beach!

    N.b. This is what dad said he would use as a blog title that time when we were in Paris and he never did so, take that dad.

    The beach was rather nice, the ocean was gorgeous as usual, and a lovely temperature. The only problem was the lack of shade!

    But no matter, we had our umbrellas!

    And as dad was twisting one into the ground, his hat began to slide off his head, and without breaking a sweat or stopping his umbrella twisting, he puts out one hand, snatches his hat from midair, puts it back on, and keeps twisting.

    The man didn’t 👏 even 👏 look 👏 up!

    A master of all skills.

    And mum also proved her genius by building us a sort of fort out of the sarongs and umbrellas, providing the most shade that that beach has ever seen. I think Dad said it best: we could come back in 2000 odd-years, and that fort would still be standing.

    Then my sisters tanned and I stayed in the shade, and we sometimes swam, and Allegra tried to drown me claiming it was an ab exercise, but the laugh on her face and the water in mine sort if gave away the lie in this, and we kept getting attacked by “sea lice”, and Liky swam out to a buoy…

    A lot happened.

    Oh, and there were turtles in the river!! Adorable turtles! Sometimes baby turtles! Dozens of cute turtles!! I can’t stress enough that there were TURTLES!

    But after a couple hours or so, we had to move on due to pesky work calls on my father’s schedule (pronounced shedule, of course).

    So we packed up, I guess 2000 years must have passed since the fort is no longer, and we made our way to the car and then to the nearby town, and my sisters got ice cream, which I forgoed (is that a word? Forwent?) in favour of FRESH ORANGE JUICE mmm I could die for some fresh orange juice how lucky am I that I don’t need to because I would.

    And do you recall the moment, not too long ago, when I praised dad for his control over his body?

    Well. Funny story.

    We were in a supermarket, and I go to stand next to my dad who contemplates a shelf of pasta. “Do we have pasta?” He asks me, reaching for some as he turns his head to face me. I don’t answer; not for a lack of knowledge on my part, but because I can see a disaster happening. My eyes widen. “Watch out!” I cry, but I am too late. My father has knocked over a dozen pasta boxes. They loudly clatter to the floor. Red faced and ashamed, we pick them up. Buy when dad faces me again, he only says one thing.

    “Don’t put this in the blog.”

    Welp, if I am known for anything, it’s my dedication to the job! Too bad dad!

    Why would he reach for precariously stacked pasta without looking, I will never understand.

    But we then drove home without further incident. Olivia and I sat down to watch an episode of the k-drama I am begrudgingly hooked on, and ten seconds in, mum said “put f1 on”.

    As they say in Spain, ¿qué?

    But yeah, apparently mum will watch f1 with her daughters but not a show of dubious quality in a foreign language.

    Perplexing.

    Sadly I had no choice but to make the switch, and 1 episode of f1 later, I was finally allowed to watch my episode of the k drama with my bestie tate!

    During this time, Liky made dinner for us, but I was forced to partake once the episode was over. Ultimately a fun time was had, I whipped out my best interpretive dance skills (always questionable; I was compared to the meme of Bill Hader dancing from 2023) and less so my cooking skills (I ate more feta than I put in the salad).

    Liky and I were perhaps crazy at this time, since at some point Liky dropped the slice utensil that we were using as a wooden spoon into the pot of boiling water, and then I used my fork to lift it out so that she could grab it with a tea towel, and I said “quick! The steam hot me”, and she said “the steam hot me too!” And we laughed.

    It is worth noting that this is on top of the words “I guee” and “I true” that we have already been using for agreement due to previous mistakes.

    Anyway.

    Also Allegra has declared me a “meanie” since the fanfic I kept begging her to read, that I promised wouldn’t make her cry, well, made her cry. And she is only halfway through. Mwahahaha *strokes cat menacingly in a spinny chair*

    Dinner was finally ready, we had made a strange mix of pasta and potato and peppers and tomato and cheese and lemon, that was deeeeeelicious. Yummerdums, as I like to say.

    Liky really does have the Casswell Concoction genes.

    In fact we discussed this during dinner, and mum pronounced “conjure” as “cunjure”. I then informed her that it was cOnjure, with an O, mum refused to hear reason, so I turned to the patriarchy, aka dad, who agreed with mum?!?

    So I put forth the argument, “it’s like constipated! Would you say cunstipated? ‘Are you cunstipated?’”

    And then dad said “no, actually, my poop’s are alright!”.

    I rolled my eyes at the s h e e r immaturity.

    Finally at some point mum asked, “why is it called “drive to survive?”” To which I answered, “it’s because these rich, mostly white men will *die* if they can’t drive their wittle fast cars around in different circles! They’ll simply die!”

    And I only mention this because everyone laughed (bar Liky, but she was laughing on the inside) which is a rare occurence indeed.

    But then everyone went inside, and Dad and I wrote our respective blogs, I of course procrastinated, I talked with my bestie Andrea (it was a 10/10 discussion, chaotic as usual) and then sadly I had to end the convo to continue this blog.

    Damn you procrasti-nation!

    Also, I have referred to Lily as Liky throughout this blog because it is a mistake I keep making and having to fix, and I told her that is she didn’t stop annoying me then she would be Liky in the blog. So. Here we are.

    And so this is where we pause our trek up Mount Olympus, folks.
    Bye family!!!
    Les mer

  • Crunch.

    24. juli, Hellas ⋅ 🌙 27 °C

    Welcome one, welcome all, back to Mount Olympus, may you catch the goats that roam freely through life’s journey!

    Today began as many days do; with vague annoyance at having been woken up, but ultimately a sense of contentment, and perhaps peace.

    It did not last.

    Sadly, we had to get out for the day, and Dad gave us a time to leave, which was, and this is important to note, 11:30. Since it was 9:45, we all thought that we had plenty of time.

    This was not in fact true.

    Lily and Allegra did yoga, too tired to face the idea of a harsher workout, and again, I watched them from my chair, eating breakfast, and wondering at their misfortune. Olivia was woken at some point, and hovered like a ghost, as she is wont to do.

    At some point, the twins came I to an argument about the sea? I don’t remember much of why, but Tate hit Alger’s with the career ending line: your Mum’s sea, and Allegra was appropriately contrite, saying, “I shouldn’t have said anything.”

    Another day, another funny moment.

    But then Tate showered, and Lily and Allegra had breakfast and we all got ready. This includes the extremely laborious task that is putting on sunscreen, and what’s more, Mum was grumpy a little and made me turn off the bopping tunes we were listening to (cf. Gracie Abrams the nepotism baby), and the sunscreen smells strange.

    So bad does it smell that it sort of makes me feel physically sick and I don’t know why.

    None of my sisters seem to have a problem with it.

    Anyway, mum was getting antsy around eleven since she thought that was our target leaving time. So was dad. As previously mentioned, leaving time was 11:30. So. We were bang on time.

    We were out the door before target time, so yay us!! Dad made us go to the bakerei as I call them, which is, I believe, German for bakery, and once we had acquired lunchables we hopped into the car with glees and drove off!

    Lily plaited my hair during this drive and then all of my sisters laughed at me, and called me an egghead, and made fun of the mole I have on my scalp, and t h e n acted really surprised when I took out the plait?? Why were they surprised? Idk.

    But forty minutes of excellent driving later, we made it to our destination, which was a beach called the Seychelles (chelles), which had been formed out of a landslide apparently.

    Sadly, to get to this beach, one had to clamber down a steep and unwelcoming path. It wasn’t the least enjoyable experience, however, since there was a rope at the end to help one across the trickier areas.

    Down on the beach we were, and mum and dad weren’t feeling it so much since there was a tourist to Simpson ratio that was too high for their liking. But they let us plant our umbrella and swim into the sea which was frankly gorgeous, the water was just so clear and turquoise and I wasn’t even freaked out when I saw a rope at the bottom (something that terrifies me more than the average scary thing).

    We alternated between water and beach, had our yummy lunch pastries, jumped off a rock, “ran” in the sea, and snacked on some bros (there was one guy who we referred to as “the mermaid” because he just looked like a mermaid would).

    But mum and dad’s annoyance at the ever growing company on the beach did not let us stay for too long, and after a while we packed up and headed back up the steep and unwelcoming path.

    To get to the path we did have to pass in front of some very good looking guys so we tried to be as cool as possible- a failure since Lily slipped about and I scraped my leg on the rock, producing a smidge of blood. So. I think the twins succeeded though.

    But up the hill we went, Tate had my blue purse that perhaps you have seen in photos, which contained my phone, otherwise I would have photographed the graze on my leg to dramatise for the blog; I thought it might have been the most interesting thing that would happen.

    Ah, how I spoke too soon.

    As we made it to the top, I asked Tate if I should take my bag back. She said “nah, it’s cool”. If only she had said yes.

    We then get in the sweltering car, and I fix the radio (call me Tony Stark), and as we were ready to leave, I noticed a wasp on Tate’s window.

    If only I hadn’t.

    Because I I told Tate to open her door so it could leave, and she did, and then we pulled out of the car park and back up the road.

    Mere moments in, I asked Tate for my phone so I could photograph my very injured leg, but as she was looking around for what should be a very accessible bag, I turned to look out the back window and saw a little blue bag in the distance lying on the floor of the car park.

    “Darn and blast!” We were all thinking. “What I good thing Ruby realised!”

    And mum ran down to the car park to get the bag off of the couple that had found it and were attempting to call me. As she ran back up, Dad reversed down- no easy feat.

    Mum handed me my bag, and I was so happy, because it contained my phone, my kindle, my debit card, my id… and of course, my Leroy Merlin token. what would I do without it???

    And with renewed vigor, we drove off…

    Until Allegra noticed tyre marks on my bag.

    Crunch.

    And I’m thinking, “damn, we drive over my bag and everything is still intact? Impressive”, before I realised that I hadn’t actually checked that everything was infact intact.

    So I took out my phone, lo and behold the back has shattered for the third time (the first being last year in Greece, if you recall).

    “How funny!” I said. “At least my phone still turns on!”

    Which, to its credit, it does. The screen had not a scratch. But then Allegra points out that the screen is not exactly attached to the back of the phone, which has bent.

    Less funny.

    So now I am phoneless, which did make me cry briefly but shhhhh, and with shaky hands I looked to see if anything else survived the ton of car that rolled over it.

    My pocket mirror was shattered, glass shards everywhere. My hairbrush was destroyed. Thankfully, my Leroy Merlin token was justttt fine.

    And by some miracle, my kindle did not even get a scratch! I don’t understand how! It is as if it wasn’t in the bag! It works perfectly! How??

    I am so happy about that because if I had lost my phone and kindle in one go I wouldn’t have been able to read anything, which might have ended me.

    But yeah. It was with a bit of a heavy heart that I lived the rest of the drive.

    But at least the music was playing- we bopped out to some Ed Sheeran, to the chagrin of my mother.

    But eventually we made it to our next location, where they had thermal springs! Which were rather cool, the water was so hot at places, and it was rather strange to be in the ocean and to be really warm.

    Ooh, I almost forgot that dad impressed us all by reversing up a thin road with cars on either side- Ffion’s dad could take notes.

    The only downside was the teenage boys- a menace to society, my sisters and I concluded. They ruin everything. Just obnoxiously shouting and walking in your personal space and backflipping off of piers and walls and boats they don’t own for some ridiculous attempt at appearing cool idk.

    Attempt being the operative word.

    Anyway! We then stopped for a drink to cool down before we made the drive home, the Twins I got a milkshake and Lily got a ridiculously sugary slushie, and we ordered three deserts between six.

    They were rather tasty and absolutely gidomino in some cases.

    Lily started to feel sick since she had “too much sugar” (as if that’s a thing lol), so I accompanied her to the beach so that she could swim and feel better if she cooled down. She did in fact feel better.

    But then it was back to the car, and Lily is grossed out by sand (weirdo) and we were barefoot, so when we made it to the car, our feet were just black.

    Yuck.

    The drive was fun, I lamented not having my phone since I won’t be able to read the updates of my book or message my friends, but Lily’s questionable music taste (bopping at times, not so much at others, but that is all personal taste) cheered me up.

    Forty-odd minutes and five goats later (literal goats on the road), we were back home!

    We chilled for a while, watched the last episode of f1 with Lily, and then I showered because my feet were still black (oops).

    This shower is weird but I did steal dad’s phone so I could listen to the Hamilton soundtrack as I showered (the only place no one can stop me from playing it) so it was allll worth it.

    Just wish I had my phone though.

    And then I read for a little while longer, and dinner time was upon us, and the food (Monday night pasta on Thursday) was delectable, thanks dad, and it was blog time!

    I did steal mum’s phone since, well, mine is out of action. 😔.

    But now I will have to pack since tomorrow is a dreaded (more dreaded now that I won’t be able to have music in my headphones) moving day!! That means an early start.

    Much to my chagrin.

    And so this is where we pause our trek up Mount Olympus, folks.
    Bye family!!!
    Les mer

  • Speed run

    25. juli, Hellas ⋅ 🌬 30 °C

    Welcome one, welcome all, back to Mount Olympus, may you catch the goats that roam freely through life’s journey!

    Now I did receive a couple comments from my family yesterday that, well, inspired many thoughts.

    First, neither of my parents will have a successful music writing nor comedic career in the near future.

    Second, Ali I appreciate your compassion in a sea of mockery.

    Third, Tim your comments seem to be increasing in amount and randomness.

    And fourth, Allegra thinks my blogs are too long.

    Which I disagree with all day long until it gets to night time and I have to write my blog but I’m staring down an empty page and my eyes are closing and I’m dreaming of inspiration and the clock ticks closer to the later hours and-

    So I have decided to shorten my blog for this evening. Speed mode, condensed mode, activated.

    So!

    Today we woke up at an ungodly time, we cleaned up and packed up, I had a breakfast of granola once more but spilled some on the floor and blamed dad; I think I got away with it since mum made dad clean it!

    And then it was like no time passed before we were out the door and in the car and driving to a petrol station. Allegra and I were just choking on the fumes in the back, it was bad, we thought our final moments had arrived as we gasped for breath. I only half jest.

    And then back on the road for a forty minute or so drive punctuated by bopping tunes (mgk’s new song, sombr’s new song, Michael Clifford’s new album).

    Then we parked the car and strolled along the town to look for a magnet, and then we found one, and so we stopped for a drink. Lily was perhaps a smidge grumpy because she was arguing with the twins about a difference in dialect and accent in French between us and them, and the she walked right into a street sign, literally smacking her head like they do in cartoons.

    It was funny but don’t tell Lily!

    Now the guy serving the drinks was such a slow walker that when our parents went back to the car to get our bags, we saw the waiter arriving and I said “you’ll be back before he is” and everyone laughed. He really was super slow and unbothered.

    Drinks done and off we went to our ferry, there were a bunch of people waiting but we sped into the boat, secured seats and damn was it a choppy boat ride, it was side to side like an Ariana Grande song, Lily felt very sick and I suffered too because I had to listen to her complain for an hour and a half that she “hasn’t got anything downloaded”.

    Yeah.

    But I read on the ferry, and when we got off I debriefed the book with Allegra (we are reading at the same time and I have read it like 9 times and I just convinced her to read it a few days ago, so) and we agreed it is a really good one.

    But we dropped our bag off at the place despite it not being check in time, strolled about town, stopped for another drink, and here mum did not get what she had ordered, but when we told her this she hummed non-comically and listlessly in a vague agreement, smiling at passerbys. We then told her again and mum said “ah”. Without listening, really.

    She then asked where her brain went. It was a whole thing. It was funny.

    After that we went back to our place after a brief wander!

    And did nothing. We watched episode after episode of New Girl (a funny show, if sexist in the earlier seasons; I canny speak for the later ones) or read in Allegra’s case.

    Mum and dad worked, but when they had a break we went shopping for foodables, Allegra and I discussed the book, she and Tate called out a chip in my tooth which has always been there, don’t know why they’re only noticing now, and then after getting food, we went back and Allegra and I read still, tis a long book, and Lily and Tate got very bored.

    So bored in fact that Lily offered to watch Hamilton, but I was torn because I was at the best part of my book, so I said no.

    And then they went out with Dad to look into quad bikes, or ATVs as Lily calls them, too which I think, All Too Vells.

    But sadly fate is against us, no All Too Vells on this island.

    And then Allegra and I read some more until we made dinner, a delicious pasta salad, bopping out the three poetic Taylor albums, and yeah.

    Then afterwards we watched the very last episode of Ted Lasso (so far, season four is now in production), and yeah that was it!

    A speed run through our day.

    Finally I would like to further address the comments of my parents; I am not addicted to my phone, I don’t miss my phone, I don’t usually spend all day in my phone, I just sometimes complain since it is inconvenient to steal Allegra’s phone to look something up or mum’s to write the blog. And I miss my fanfiction, that I admit freely.

    So.

    Yeah!

    (Also forgive spelling mistacos as I call them, mum’s phone is much bigger than mine, my smol fingers are not used to the keyboard)

    And so this is where we pause our trek up Mount Olympus, folks.
    Bye family!!!
    Les mer

  • Searchin for an urchin

    26. juli, Hellas ⋅ 🌬 30 °C

    Welcome one, welcome all, back to Mount Olympus, may you catch the goats that roam freely through life’s journey!

    Fellow travelers (in that your spirit travels even if your body stays put; in fact, some philosophers say that you only need to read to be considered well travelled, but what do I know, I didn’t technically pass my philosophy exam, and they were all probably drunk anyway), it is a commonly known fact that the hardest part of the journey is the first step.

    A blog must be a journey then, since I can NEVER FIND A GODDAMN OPENING LINE!

    Now that that’s out of the way, I can tell you that I woke up in Allegra’s bed. This is because she made me move to her cramped single mattress on the floor with her, since my bed really squeaks as soon as I move. This annoyed a good amount of people, and Lily’s bed was the same.

    Plus, Allegra was really cold because the aircon was on so she was in dire need of a snuggle. Twas life or death.

    So I had a terrible sleep once more. I should rename the blog “a series of unfortunate beds” at this point. I don’t think I’ve had a good sleep since we got here.

    Anyway, Lily made me have breakfast with her, it was frankly much too sugary sweet (Kellogg and soja vanille, now everyone who knows dad knows he likes to say I am a fussy bugger, this is a fact, but I don’t agree with it, I prefer to say I have refined taste in order to uphold my pride, anyway, I only like one specific brand of soja vanille milk. And no other milk. So. This was not that brand. It was so darn sweet.)

    And Tate had Korean lessons this morning so she was confined to mum and dad’s room to do her call, and what did we do for like an hour and a half?

    We watched Hamilton act 1.

    That’s right, finally my whole family hath seen the first act of my fave musical! Yayyyyyy!

    It was bopping, no one else agreed really, I was still the happiest I have been at such a time of the morning.

    But the happiness was not to last, because after act 1 Allegra and Lily did sport while I read. This seems to be staple of every morning at this point.

    And then we had to get ready 🙁 to go out ☹️ which includes sunscreen 😢 and going into boiling heat of outside 😭.

    It wasn’t so bad though. While we got ready, Lily watched the f1 qualifiers, since she is now up to date with the past races and is ready to watch them live!

    Sadly my man Hamilton (Lewis, not Alexander) is not doing so good.

    But then we left, with no spring in our shuffle. This may have been due to an argument? My memory is hazy, and I cannot write down notes of what happened (cf: dad drove over my phone). So.

    But the walk was long, though I thought it would be worth it since dad promised me that we would pass some ruins, and I do love me a good ruin, but we did not. So.

    And it was uphill and hot and 2pm (cf: an activity done only by mad dogs and English men), and it was suffering, and we finally made it to the beach and had to partake in some uncouth clambering (I say uncouth only because I love the word and it was in my head and when I am tired (cf: everytime I write the blog) I have little filter so perhaps I question my life choices the next day. Anyway.) before we made it to our cove!

    It was fun. There were very many urchins though.

    We did some swimming and diving and some fun snorkeling during which Tate and I saw a thick ahh sea urchin, truly massive, luckily much too deep for us to reach, so we went back and told the tale to our parents.

    They then hastened to take a look, and dad was wholly unimpressed. He was like “tis a regular sized urchin, fool.” It was really harsh.

    But it was funny because every time I saw an urchin, which was often, I would say “are you searchin’ for an urchin who can give you ideals” (what can I say I am Hamilton obsessed) and Lily found it funny and we kept bringing it up, and when I wouldn’t swim with her, she called me “an urchin whose ideals she was not searchin’ for”.

    It was a whole thing.

    Besides that, Lily argued loudly and longly with mum. My sisters and I hate it because it is truly a blow to our reputation, we keep getting looks from people enjoying the quiet, and we sort of just look away awkwardly hoping that they understand that we are in no way involved.

    And we all tanned on a rock that dad at one point climbed up, Lily was very uncomfortable in her spot, but I had a perfect seat, and every time she complained, I could not help but remind her that I felt like the rock I was on was more comfortable than my mother’s womb had been.

    Not that I remember, but still. Tis the principle of the matter.

    Anyway.

    After a couple hours, we decided to head home, meaning another thirty minute walk, so we packed up our stuff, but Lily and I felt rather faint in the sun, so Lily declared she was hyperglycemic and needed sugar. With joy, she discovered she had a packet of sugar in her bag and offered to split it with me. I am never one to say no to sugar.

    I had more than half on accident, leaving her maybe twenty grains, and felt soooo bad. Plus I then loudly proclaimed that it wasn’t good because it was brown sugar (refined taste, remember?).

    Luckily, we had juice in the bag.

    The walk home was dastardly. A steep uphill in hot hot weather. Lily at one point almost pitched off the edge into a donkey field. Our discussions were long and random, including, but not limited to, the fact that we did not know au paires were still a thing, the future and how we could do anything, and (understandable?) sexism against men when it comes to babysitting.

    We arrived home and I thought that was it, we’re never going out again in the damn sun, I can relax (I have a thing against beaches, I don’t really like the sand or the sea or the heat. Which is stupid I know).

    To my ABSOLUTE HORROR we were going back out for drinks?? And I was thinking, it’s six? We’re having drinks? It’s so hot?

    And dad said I didn’t have to go but he l i e d. I didn’t ultimately mind.

    So we went out and I just got a sprite (which I am super happy about because I am collecting the lil tabs from cans so I can one day make chainmail). During this, we thought about dinner options. Lily said “I can make a salted tomato salad”, and dad h i l a r i o u s l y said “we don’t need to beat it up, Lil”. Get it?? Assaulted? Anyway.

    Drinks done, mum and dad f i n a l l y realised the time, and said “let’s just go out for dinner”. (I shudder to think about what they would have said I f I hadn’t gone out to get drinks with them. Probably the same thing. I would have been sitting alone, wondering if my family would ever come back). So we did, even though it was only seven, we went back to a restaurant we passed where a waiter had called out “are you looking for a job?” As a joke, and dad bantered with him a bit, saying he would if he could be paid in beer. So we went back there for dinner, and the man said he would give dad a free beer or ouzo.

    Everyone thought back to our first night in Greece when mum was “flirting” with the waiter and got free beer, and we thought, “dad saw the free beer, thought “hell yeah” and took up mum’s tactics.”

    It was really funny. And the food was delicious too.

    Many a funny moment was had, if a tad unsavory for polite company. But as we all know, tired Ruby has no filter so I am gonna put it on, idk be forewarned.

    So first you should know that Lily has corrupted us all by making constant “that’s what she said” jokes about anything. So when she said “it was hard and tastes kinda chickeny”, Allegra shocked us all by saying “that’s what she said”, and dad laughed sooo hard.

    My filter has kicked in and I have decided to save my own dignity. Too late for Allegra though.

    Yeah. Anyway.

    Other things worth mentioning during the dinner, a napkin blew past mum, so, behind her, and she looked in front of her, saying “where did it go?”.

    Not in front of you when you watched it blow past you, that’s for damn sure!

    Anyway.

    We then discussed my ideal 18th birthday and I just couldn’t think of anything but then mum had a genius idea which would honestly be my ideal birthday, but I shan’t tell you what it was teehee. I mean who knows if it will happen.

    Dad then got an extra glass of ouzo (Greek alcohol) which tastes strikingly similar to fennel, which is yummy. It did burn my lip which I had bitten the skin off on accident though.

    And then after dad took a suspiciously long amount of time to pay, mum’s words, we left and strolled back to our house in the Greek evening air.

    It was ultimately a fun time.

    Back at the house, we chilled and wrote the blog, had biscuits for some of us, and then partook in some strange dance line with my sisters that was hilarious, I think mum and dad began to wonder where they had gone wrong in raising us as they stared in befuddlement.

    As I wrote the blog on mum’s phone, I took the chance to message my sisters from mum’s number to inform that that they were her least favourite child (Liv and Lil) or adopted (Leg).

    It was funny.

    And that’s all!’

    And so this is where we pause our trek up Mount Olympus, folks.
    Bye family!!!
    Les mer

  • Brioche bread

    27. juli, Hellas ⋅ 🌙 26 °C

    Welcome one, welcome all, back to Mount Olympus, may you catch the goats that roam freely through life’s path!

    Today was a day that I can appreciate because of a d i s t i n c t lack of sand. Yayyy!!

    So we woke up, twas fairly chill if cold. Lily has set an earlier alarm to do some sport with Allegra, so I took the extra thirty minutes to read before mum and dad’s alarm went off and I was supposed to get up.

    I did read for like, twenty more minutes.

    Morning people are the worst: so proud of it, of being “efficient” or whatever, that they have no respect for night people. See at night I am as quiet as a mouse, make no noise, reading peacefully, scared to wake any one. But Lily? She was singing, she was clapping, she was laughing… honestly. No respect. It is actually something that really bothers me.

    Anyway.

    At 9:58 exactly, we were out the door, strolling down to the activity of the day: a boat! But liked a touristy boat with other people.

    It was rather cool, though there was little space for the amount that we were, however we did secure a spot for us all to sit, so twas alright.

    We had some funny discussions, including one about phobias, namely tripophobia, and then I brought up aibophobia, fear of palindromes. We then tried to think of palindromes (racecar, redivider), and mum thought long, mum thought hard, mum said, “minutes”.

    We all laughed. Even mum, who was unable to explain why she thought that.

    Palindromes one, dyslexics nil!

    The boat was nice because the breeze was of the cool nature. Our first stop was some cool sort of cave/rock tunnel thing that you could swim through. Allegra and I jumped off, swam in panic (we don’t like deep water so much (thalassophobia? Jkjk)) and then mum was already off into the cave.

    So I said, “let’s follow her!” Allegra said, “No!” I said, “We can pretend we’re Regulus!” (Who drowned in a cave) Allegra said, “Let’s go!”

    Fun times.

    So we did swim through the cave/rock tunnel, it was gorgeous, the water seems to make one’s hands luminsecent. Good fun, I recommend.

    But then while swimming back, I saw the chain from the anchor and bkeurgh! There is nothing (bar Taylor Swift releasing a new album while I’m unaware of it (fun fact apparently she has filmed a new music video?? What does it meannnnn)) that I am more scared of than a chain or rope underwater. I can’t stand it.

    So I panic swam back to the boat: a sight to see.

    As we jumped off, Lily took some photos. Rather unflattering, they were. But good fun all the same.

    And then we were off to location number two! I made Allegra take some pictures of me looking great in the boat, and we played the word association game I mentioned a while ago (we started with “sunglasses” and “glasses” and ended with “superhero” so, we nailed it), and ultimately twas a fun, chill time.

    At the next place, we all got out, twas a stony beach. My sisters and I messed around a little, Tate carried me around, and then we all walked along the beach to a secluded area. For me and Olivia, who lacked shoes, twas painful as can be.

    But it was fun, my sisters and I sat on a rock and lamented the lack of smashes on the boat with us, dad fell over a couple times while trying to take our photo from the sea, fun times.

    But time was up, so we walked back to the boat. Mum had picked up some litter along the way, and swam it all the way back to the boat like the hero she is. Dad carried a sort of plastic carton/container thing, begrudgingly. Also a hero.

    Back on the boat, twas lunch time, so dad and the twins went to get drinks. They bought back Fanta for the twins and wine(?) for the adults, including me.

    I wasn’t the biggest fan. But then they bought our sandwiches and it was allllll worth it. Allegra had been looking forward to the brioche bread all morning, sometimes going so far as to shout “brioche bread” while we were in the sea. Twas funny.

    At the next stop, the water was gorgeously blue, but none of us siblings were in the mood for more swimming, we were a little chilly. I gave Tate a back massage, Lily read, Allegra tanned, and I then read too.

    There was an American family next to us that had two small children, and the girl was just dancing away to the music that was playing for hours on end, and her dance moves were, well, subpar? Random? Not very melodious? Take your pick.

    Of course the whole fam hastened to compare her to me, and my childhood dance skills. I couldn’t my decide whether to laugh or be offended.

    Anyway, the trip continued in this manner until we arrived at an island entitled Arki, thanks dad’s blog for the notification at the perfect time, and we were told to be back on the boat in two hours.

    So we stopped at a taverna, and Lily complained to us about how some waiters could not look more unbothered, and when she worked in hospo, she was always smiling . Or whatever. But the food was quite tasty, and I added four can tabs to my collection, so it all worked out.

    We still had an hour left, so mum and dad and the twins headed off to find a beach while Lily and I sat in the square, which was more of a circle, and Lily joyously began to watch the live stream of an f1 race. She had been looking forward to it all day and was happy that she would be able to watch it!

    I sat by her in solidarity, especially when she was a lil disappointed that the race was delayed by like, an hour, due to rain in the track. So.

    An hour later, the race hadn’t started, and we had to get back on the boat. We drove? Boated? Floated? off to the next and final spot, just a nice place where it was fun to jump in from the boat, and the American family’s dad dove in off the boat right after Tate did it *first*. So then everyone started diving, and he loudly referred to himself as a “divefluencer” and I was just so shocked at this blatant disregard for Tate, who dove first. But on the other hand, he is a straight white man, so of course he probably thinks he *did* do it first. In fact he probably thinks he is the first man in the w h o l e world to dive off a boat.

    I got quite annoyed and complained to Allegra. In French of course. Nothing as good as critiquing people when they can’t understand. The perks of being bilingual!

    And then it was time to head home. Lily’s race had started, so she joyously kept us updated on who was where (we all have favorites: dad likes Piastri, who won I think, Lily likes Verstappen, Tate likes Tsunoda, and I believe Allegra and mum couldn’t care less. Ofc, my favourite is Hamilton. Who moved from 18th to 7th place! Slayed, honestly.

    Anyway, as we pulled into the harbour, the guy played some bopping music so of course, being Simpsons, we were contractually obligated to bring out our best dance moves and do a sitting dance circle. Mum filmed the whole thing, and we laughed a lot. But the dance gods knew we would be too powerful if anyone ever saw the footage. We would be unstoppable, really, so said dance gods must have stopped the camera from working, as Mum did not actually film.

    I’m sure you can imagine how bopping it was though, based on the previous dance circle in Amsterdam, which you saw.

    And finally, we made it home, and were able to chill for real. Of course, I read my book, but quickly got distracted as the Euro cup football final was on! Ofc we had to watch. It was English v Spanish, which took us back to last year in Greece where we watched the English v Spanish men’s Euro cup final.

    But then Lily was making dinner and playing Taylor so, I made a choice since I am very uninterested in football, and I went and sang along to Taylor.

    I then realised I had to shower, so I did, and there are few things I dislike more than a lukewarm shower, but one of them is a cold shower. Which I had. As I like to say, I was Aaron Brrr, sir. Hihi.

    And then dinner was ready, Lily had made some delicious garlic/melted cheese mix on a fried tomato, which was a 10/10 meal, and we also had toasties, as we watched the Euro cup. They made it to penalty shootouts! And there was a lot of shouting at the tv (when they made one woman retake a goal and she missed) but eventually we all celebrated because unlike the men last year who failed miserably, the women’s England team won the Euro cup!!!!!!

    And then we were all tired, so I started to write the blog, and then Tate lay in Lily’s bed and refused to move, so Lily and I tried to coordinate ourselves to carrying her to her own bed, it ended up with Lily falling into Allegra’s bed, with Allegra in it, and Tate was dropped on top of Lily, but I had her legs, so I unbalanced, and it ended up with a Simpson pile on a disgruntled Allegra’s bed.

    Mum was not very happy.

    But I wrote the blog for maybe twenty minutes, and then just got sooooo tired that I decided to finish it tomorrow morning. Which I have just done.

    And so this is where we pause our trek up Mount Olympus, folks.
    Bye family!!!
    Les mer

  • Some very not repetitive journalism.

    28. juli, Hellas ⋅ 🌙 26 °C

    Welcome one, welcome all, back to Mount Olympus, may you catch the goats that roam freely through life’s path!

    Today was a day barely worth reporting.

    No, I jest, I would never dream of leaving you, my adoring readers and philosophical travelers, wondering what we did on this fine Monday!

    Of course, I read as soon as Lily’s alarm woke me up. Ooh! I bring you an insider scoop! Rumor has it that Lily and Allegra Simpson, who were only yesterday commended for their dedication, may stop doing daily sport! Sources say that Lily said “I just hate sport” and “It’s lost its appeal” and Allegra agreed! Eyewitnesses tell us that they did no exercise this morning.

    More at 5!

    But then I remembered that I hadn’t my finished my blog yesterday, so I hastened to do so- I was just tooo tired last night. Whoops! I shouldn’t keep mentioning that I’m tired! My most dedicated critic has informed me that saying this “is repetitive journalism” and “makes for a boring read”.

    I would never want Lily to be bored I shall never speak of my fatigued state again!

    So here is some very not repetitive journalism.

    And then I did the dishes while the rest of my sisters did nothing. Nada. Nil.

    So understandably, when dad came in, he said “rumple is the best” and I was disgruntled at the cursed (pronounced curs-ed) nickname, so dad then said, “in fact, I would go as far as to say, Ruby is the best”, so I was very happy and rubbed it in my sisters’ faces with glee.

    But the happiness was not to last. I was told we were going to a beach again, but as you know, at the risk of sounding entitled, I am a tad tired of them and so I was vaguely put out at this news. Especially since my hair was looking great and salt water would just dry it out.

    Lunch was had, the potato pastries are delicious and I would die for them. Mum kindly gave me half of her’s, solidifying her status as my favourite mum ever.

    But Lily was not very happy for the same reasons as I, so she was looking to start arguments with everyone. Sadly, I am simply too smart and witty to be outwitted by her, so she did just get a bit more disgruntled.

    But she was arguing with mum, with dad, sort of with me, the twins were annoyed at the arguments so started arguing with us, it was a crazy moment.

    But then it seemed to pass, and Lily and I were laughing together, and we put on sunscreen, andddd then the arguing started again, over stupid things as usual.

    But as soon as we stepped out the door the arguing stopped.

    Twas another thirty or so minute walk, in the hot sun, my siblings and I played the song association game (someone says a word and you have to find it in a song). At some point Dad joined in, brought up Simon and Garfunkel, and then tried to sing one of their songs but didn’t quite have the words, so Allegra hilarious told him, “you Simon and Garfumbled that”.

    We all laughed.

    At the beach, I decided to not swim, and simply lie on my towel and read. I was being hilarious, if I do say so myself; dad laughed at me many a time, even if I do not recall why.

    The twins were swimming away, mum and Lily were frantically fending off ginormous ants, and I was peacefully relaxed, doling out words of wisdom such as “you need to lay down the law, and the ants won’t bother you!”

    A fun time was had.

    And of course, mum was picking up plastic from the beach to throw away, like the hero she is.

    But mum and dad tired of the beach, and the tides was coming in, so we packed up and headed off. The walk home was a long one, but I had fashioned myself a dress out of a sarong as I had yesterday, and I looked awesome. So it was allll worth it.

    I was offered the opportunity to prove my genius once more, as well as my collection of random knowledge, as I love to do, when dad asked, “I wonder if “dendra” has something to do with trees,” and I told him yes, because dendrochronology is the science of studying trees to figure out climats of the past etc.

    Everyone would be lost without me.

    Well, not lost, but they would know a wholeeeee lot less about dendrochronology.

    But no sooner were we in the door than we were back out again, after a quick outfit change and mandatory argument (Lily can’t stand anyone wearing a white dress if she is wearing a different white dress, apparently), and we headed to the supermarket to get necessities such as a sewing kit, which Allegra a s s u r e d me we would not find, and as she spoke, Mum walked up behind her brandishing one. Twas funny.

    And then it was ice cream o’clock! My favourite time of the day!

    I got a Ferrero ice cream since they had no regular chocolate. Although they did have Dubai chocolate ice cream, although I forwent that because since Dubai chocolate has become a trend, there has been a pistachio shortage.

    Look at me, saving the world one pistachio at a time. Commendable.

    Following this, we had a brief wander around town, looking into shops, buying a magnet and an “evil eye to ward off evil from our house” (I hilariously said to mum, “geez Louise, if you didn’t want me to come home, you could have just said,” but mum just looked at me and said, “ok”), and ambled back home.

    Now here I would usually mention f1, but Lily is the one who deemed it necessary that f1 be mentioned in every blog, and, as we all know, she is not a fan of “repetitive journalism”. I reiterate, I wouldn’t want to bore you Lily, so I shall never mention it again!

    What a benevolent author I am.

    I regret making fun of Lily since I am now telling you that Lily asked to watch Hamilton act 2 with me, which I did with glee, it was amazing, I love Hamilton and ofc my fave Eliza stole the show as per usual, but we only made it up until (spoiler alert) his son died, because Lily had to hop and skip into the kitchen to make dinner!

    I kept fumbling my vocabulary, as Allegra would say, by saying “the pettle or the can” instead of “the kettle or the pan” and this took me like five tries to get right. Anyway.

    And then twas dinner time, and the meal was scrumptious, Lily knows how to make a good pasta! Also mum gave me a massive amount of feta. Which I love.

    During dinner we watched the end of Hamilton, twas amazing, although Lily declared she liked the show but not the guy, he was “a pick me” and “annoying” and honestly? She might be right. He brought everything unto himself. So. If I was Aaron Burr I would’ve shot him much earlier in.

    But it was funny when during “Your obedient servant” Tate said, “I don’t get why he called himself A dot Ham, he’s just saying, “yeah I’m a piece of pig”.

    Lily and I laughed so hard, as we are won’t to do.

    But after Hamilton we watched something of less quality, being Naked Gun, which is the stupidest film ever, Mum and Dad found it hilarious, so it was all worth it.

    And then came bed time! So here we are now, at the end of the day as I lie in bed feeling a sense of accomplishment at having finished the blog before bed!

    And so this is where we pause our trek up Mount Olympus, folks.
    Bye family!!!
    Les mer

  • Peace treaty, if you will.

    29. juli, Hellas ⋅ 🌙 27 °C

    Welcome one, welcome all, back to Mount Olympus, may you catch the goats that roam freely through life’s path!

    Today was a dreaded yet revered moving day, and boy oh boy, ‘twas one for the ages!

    So we woke up to the morning people (insert annoyance here) being once more obnoxiously smug about being awake. So the only weapon in my arsenal against these people is to be obnoxiously smug about being asleep, something Tate and I have perfected.

    So I gave half hearted thumbs up every time someone said “it’s r e a l l y time to be up!”, and stayed in bed for a good twenty minutes.

    Because we had two hours to get ready. This is ages.

    Indeed, after an hour, we were ready to leave, but we still had an hour left. So I downloaded some fanfics onto my kindle, my sisters listened to bopping tunes, and we did nothing until it was checkout time: 11:00.

    We almost forgot our magnets, to Dad’s great almost-sadness.

    But out we were, and here’s the plot twist: we had three hours until our boat arrived.

    There was one obvious thing to do for half of that time.

    Play giant chess in the square!

    Lily and I played vs Allegra and Tate, and it was a long, evenly matched game (in that none of us really know how to play well). Lily and I were losing pieces early in, stuck on the defensive. We were getting desperate as we sent our men to the battlefield and few returned. We did my know if they lived, died, or were held captive by the enemy.

    We took their queen, but lost ours in the process. We were beaten down. Weak. Near-defeated.

    It was out of necessity that a plan hatched. One that told of misdirection, distraction, and subterfuge. One bishop, one castle, six moves ahead. We planned. We protected. We subtly moved closer.

    We thought we had done it.

    Check mate, we said. We felt glee. Hope, for our people. The ability to win the war.

    It was snatched from our fingertips by a variable we hadn’t considered. Their king took our castle.

    We were ruined.

    It had been our last hurrah. We had nothing. A king a mind a few haphazardly strewn pawns. We had almost given up.

    Their castle, bishop and horse chased our king to near exile. We were in Check every other move. I have to hand it to them; they had a strong offense.

    But in a moment of luck, and blindness on their part, we managed to escape, take some pieces of theirs, and close in on their king.

    It ended in a tie. A peace treaty, if you will.

    Because it had been an hour and a half and mum and dad kept helping the twins and never us and it was exhausting and hot in the midday sun. And we needed lunch.

    So we abandoned all animosity and made our way to a restaurant, where I had a Greek salad! Yayyyy!

    The waiter forgot to bring out drinks so we only had them after the food was finished, but I can happily say that I am the owner of 29 can tabs as of today. Chainmail something, here I come!

    And the time came to mosey down to the docks and wait for our boat, which was late. We could not see it on the sea, we waited in the shade.

    While we waited, we saw the most adorable ginger three legged cat. It was really sooo cute, and I believe Allegra’s exact words were, “a ginger! Adopt it like you adopted me!”

    (That may be on me, folks.)

    But then, to everyone’s surprise, our boat came around the corner and it was quite funny because it was speeding along. That boat knew it was late. Watching it felt like a car chase in a movie m, in a way that I cannot explain.

    So we did what we did best, and speed walked our way onto the boat before all the other passengers in order to secure seats, which we did with glee.

    The boat ride itself was fairly chill, not as nausea-inducing as the previous one had been, and I did happily have peace and quiet since Lily had downloaded a movie in advance. No whining today!

    An hour later and we were pulling into the next island: Kalymnos!

    As we stepped off, I asked Dad a question, and he answered, but said he wasn’t sure, so “don’t quote me on that”. See, I was going to hilarious quote exactly what he said in the blog, and it would have been sooooo funny, and you all would have laughed because I quoted him when he asked not too…

    We are all missing out on just *peak* comedy here. If only I remembered what we talked about.

    But as Dad sorted out the car, and me, Leg and Lil read on a bench, Mum and Tate went to check out the sponge museum shop thing. Because apparently Kalymnos is the home of sea-sponges. And I also learned that back in the day you used to have to bring back a sponge from a dive, or literally die. “Sponge or skin” was their oath.

    How oddly macabre.

    But Mum and Olivia were basically given a rundown on the island by the shop owner, it was quite funny how Dad would say something and mum would go, “I know, the shop lady told me”. It had nothing to do with sponges.

    Mum also bought a loofa.

    On the car ride, I sacrificed myself and sat alone in the back with all the bags and no aircon, while my sisters were all in the middle. Such is the life of a middle child.

    Allegra loudly professed her love for trees (she is sooo her father’s daughter; just read my blog Give Puys a Chance to understand).

    And then we made it to our place, got shown around, and it is like three times as big as every other place we have stayed. Dad wittily joked that we wouldn’t see each other because we all had separate rooms.

    Speaking of rooms…

    There is one room that is quite small, just a double bed and a cupboard, and another room that has two sections, stairs between them, balcony access, a bigger double bed…

    Of course there were other rooms but they are of no consequence in this tale.

    So I bagsied the bigger room. This left mum and dad with the small room. They seemed so perplexed that I would actually say this and stand my ground. Lily tried to guilt me out of it. I held firm.

    I am now the inhabiter of the big room.

    And I feel vaguely terrible about it, but also happy: will this be the end of the series of unfortunate beds? Updates tomorrow!

    Since the last place didn’t have a washing machine, we had to do our washing here, so Lily and I made our piles, made our way to the washing machine which is outside, but then, shock horror, as I turned, it sounded something like this;

    “THE F**K???” From Lily.

    “What? OH CHRIST!” From me.

    For in our way, there was a big grasshopper. We could not defeat it. We resigned ourselves to our fate of being stuck with the washing machine for life.

    Legend has it our souls remain there.

    After a few minutes, I squared my shoulders, and took a running leap accompanied by a very undignified squeak.

    The grasshopper did not move. I don’t think it wanted to attack us. This did not stop Lily from doing the same as I.

    But then we chilled and it was fun and relaxing, I read a lil book with info about the Dodecanese,found out some interesting facts to randomly dispense to my family and or the blog readers during our time on this island (such as sponge or skin), but then mum and dad started arguing over little things. My sisters and I were just like “get over it, stop acting like children” because it was just the ridiculous squabbling and sulking of overtired kids, but what can you do.

    They made up eventually so all was well. A peace treaty, if you will.

    Tate and I stayed behind (we looked adorable, snuggling under a blanket in an armchair) as they went to the supermarket to look for food, they didn’t find much. Lily and Allegra still made a well tasty dinner including pasta, egg, and mushroom, so that was impressive. I got caught up on the news since I haven’t had my phone and I love reading the news, and also checked my messages.

    At dinner time, we laughed a lot, especially at one point when we Allegra said “who lives in a pineapple under the sea” and we all chorused “SpongeBob! SquarePants!” Despite having never watched SpongeBob, or at another, when we tried to explain the Swiss Cowshark Instagram joke to mum, and Allegra said Showcark. Hihi!

    We also got very perplexed over a light we could see low in the sky; Dad said “it’s an airplane”, Lily said “it’s a light on a faraway hill”, I said “it’s a bird! It’s a plane!” Tate said “it’s BlackPink!” Allegra said, “It’s my Grandma who got set on fire and flown into the air!”.

    Mum rolled her eyes at our crazy.

    But then the time came for writing blogs and going to bed, so here we are! Biscuit time was not had since the shop had no biscuits. What are we to do???!

    And so this is where we pause our trek up Mount Olympus, folks.
    Bye family!!!
    Les mer

  • That DAMN GINGER BOY

    30. juli, Hellas ⋅ 🌙 26 °C

    Welcome one, welcome all, back to Mount Olympus, may you catch the goats that roam freely through life’s path!

    Today was a day that I can get behind: a chill day.

    I woke up, spread out in my massive double bed. My head was not on the pillow (sometimes they annoy me what can I say), and despite being lower on the bed, I had not even ruffled the folded towels placed on the end. That’s how big my bed is.

    Or maybe it’s a testament to me being small.

    But I chilled in bed before getting up. I checked the notes app on mums phone as I did this, and saw a note with a title that took me some time to understand, before I remembered: last night, Tate and I were up late as per usual, and when I left, I pretended to bite her foot, and she said, “Don’t eat my feet!” After a pause where we stared at each other in vague horror, Tate breaks into a shimmy dance, and says, “They’re not *seasoned*!” And pretended to season her feet. But she said it in a way that Schmidt from New Girl would, for those who know.

    It was so funny. I’m sure you can imagine my confusion when I saw that written down first thing in the morning.

    Anyways that story was probably too long, so I made my way upstairs, past the open door to Mum and Dad’s room, and I snuck up on Lily who was in the kitchen. Lily then exclaimed that she didn’t know I was up, since when she walked by mum and dad had said “morning moo moo!”. I was deeply hurt, so decided to walk by again, just in case, even sticking my head in the room.

    Nothing. My heart is but a shriveled husk.

    Lily loudly laughed. Mum later apologized and called me a “church mouse”. I don’t know what to say.

    Breakfast was decidedly not tasty since it was real milk which - refined taste - is something I have grown to dislike since being sort of vegan.

    Lily and I then had a vague argument about the pronunciation of a word, I can’t remember which, and I then asked Dad. Lily stopped him from answering, saying it annoyed her when I did that, and why didn’t I ever ask mum, and it’s the patriarchy. While perhaps true, I simply relied, “mum makes up words all the time”. Unbeknownst to me, Mum was behind me, so I jumped when I heard her say, “it’s true, but I feel like that’s a hypocritudity”.

    We laughed.

    But then Lily was laughing less because she was reading my blog from a a day or two ago, and she took a strong offense. Apparently, Max Verstappen isn’t her favourite, but rather Lewis Hamilton is. On that note, Dad made the same comment : he also prefers Hamilton to Piastri.

    What I’m hearing is that Lewis Hamilton is an f1 god.

    Lily also took offense about the two white dresses that we both wore, but she changed: they are very similar. Both “baby doll style and Greek white”, she says. I said I would print a retraction. Or just apologise in the blog. So. Sorry!

    At some point in the morning, Allegra got up. Mum walked into the room she was in, Allegra said “wait gang” (she has picked up the habit of calling anyone “gang” it’s quite funny), and Mum said “oh, sorry gang,” and idk why but I found it hilarious. So. It’s in the blog. Such is your plight that you have brought upon yourself by reading my barely coherent fatigued ramblings.

    Anyway, then I proceeded to die for reasons I will not disclose. So I fled my family to go hang out with my favourite sister, Tate. Who was asleep. Hence why she is my favourite: she can’t bother me.

    I read in peace for a while, but then decided to shower since the one here was the nicest in all of the places we had stayed.

    I struggled for ages trying to get music- my account would not connect on Tate’s phones and I knew she wouldn’t be happy if I played Taylor on her Spotify.

    Too bad for her, because mine wouldn’t work. So.

    She was indeed not happy when she woke up and found out.

    But a thing about that bathroom is that the lock is a lil’ annoying. In that when I tried to unlock it, the old vaguely rusted key wouldn’t budge.

    I wriggled it again. No joy.

    Three minutes of desperate attempts to get out of the damn bathroom later, I began to make my peace with living there permanently; I had music, one small window, what more would I need?

    One last hit against the door, and it must have dislodged something, because I could turn the key, and leave my prison.

    The return to civilization was tough. Society, being around people, after being alone for so long…

    Lily and Allegra had done yoga, so while it seems they have given up on their exercising dreams, they have never given up on Cassandra. Those who know, know (I’m looking at you Ali :)).

    After that, I chilled a while, then chilled with Lily as she did her makeup (it is always very satisfying to watch since I have no ability to do makeup; it’s very nice to watch Lily expertly navigate her eyes). I did paint my nails blue to match Greece , though.

    But we had to go out to the supermarket of the island, which was about a twenty minute drive give or take. So we all got dressed and ready and then we made our way out. We passed a fruit truck (the one source of vitamin C in the town? The only way to avoid scurvy (an illness that is objectively hilarious to me. Like, you can die. Unless ☝️ you eat an orange)?). Sadly they had no plums, Allegra’s one true love.

    We piled into the car and were on our way. Mum and dad decided they wanted some variety in their life and turned right instead of left.

    This turned out to be a rookie mistake.

    The roads were tiny. The turns were sharp. The parked cars had no regard for rules or the space necessary for others to pass.

    It resembled one way streets. Sadly, they weren’t.

    Two taxis appeared ahead of us, coming our way. Dad had no choice but to reverse through the narrow alleyways, as the taxis advanced.

    It was like watching a master at work. Like the birth of star. DaVinci painting the Mona Lisa in real time.

    We all stayed in breathless silence, as Dad navigated the streets and cars and mopeds.

    Finally, we were in a spot where the taxi’s could pass. One did with no qualms. The other had to stop, roll down his window, and basically call us “bloody tourists” but in polite wording.

    Pfft. As if he could do what Dad just did.

    Anyway, we then made it to the supermarket with little trouble.

    The supermarket was fun, we bought food. What can I say. It’s a supermarket.

    Afterwards, we walked along the pavementless road with fast cars and blind corners to the nearest bakery. Now as we were in there ordering a bunch of stuff and asking what everything was, this ginger lad, maybe twenty or so, came in to get a chocolate milk and that was it. He had to wait in line behind us for maybe five minutes, I found it funny.

    Anyway, we then made our way back to our car, drove a much easier route back home, and after a small amount of trouble at the small waterside road outside our house.

    And as this trouble was taking place, a guy on a moped passed us.

    And it was GINGER BAKERY BOY!!

    We found this so funny. This bakery is like twenty or more minutes from our house. So. How is he here???? It was very funny.

    Back at our place, we had some lunch, consisting of the pastries we had bought from the bakerei as I like to call them,

    During lunch, Dad made the old school friend joke, this time about his Irish friend, Dermot O’logist. It was rather funny. We then had a conversation about the twins’ thoughts on how one should respond to a compliment: apparently they think you have to say thank you and not “I know”. It got a little heated when Lily and I vehemently disagreed with them. Allegra’s exact words were “you annoying piece of sh**, you stuck-up wa**er, go straight to hell you ugly piece of sh**”.

    I said “I know”.

    But it was all in good fun, Allegra would like to state that she is not an aggro person, and after lunch we were back to happy chaps once more, although we were all shook to realise that it was 4 already.

    We didn’t do much for a while, since it is a rest day, but then Lily and Allegra forced me and Tate to go down to the beach that we literally can see from our balcony, we are just about in top of it which is very convenient. So we did, although Lily made us sunscreen in the six o’clock barely there sun, but we strolled down to the beach.

    And then I see a familiar head of hair, which of course I point out to my sisters.

    That DAMN GINGER BOY was at the beach!!!

    It’s quite funny how he is everywhere.

    But we all had a quick dip, mine was shortened by a fish that seemed to have a vendetta.

    You see, I was just chilling when I get a sudden pain in my shin, I’m thinking, did I kick a rock or something? So I look around in the water and I vaguely see a very small fish.

    Which proceed to swim at me at full speed and just crash into my leg again.

    It actually hurts a bit, so I got out of the water, telling my sisters about how I had been chased out by an angry fish. Tate didn’t believe me.

    Her reckoning came in the form of that same fish. She swam far out to avoid it.

    Lily laughed at me.

    Her reckoning came in the form of that same fish. She fled the water like me.

    Allegra was impartial and so was spared the immeasurable violence of such a small creature.

    We chilled at the beach, watching the pale ginger lad with a dark haired, well tanned family, wondering how he fell in with such a crowd, but Tate and I headed in since we had no desire to be there in the first place.

    We relaxed, I read, she messaged her friends, but Dad went out to join my sisters and bring them back, so they came home and installed chaos. Well not really, but still.

    I hung out with Lily in the front room, then went to hang out with Tate, then decided I would make dinner, but dad told me it was too early so I instead hung out with him and Lily on the balcony. I did a sudoku as we listened to the sweet sounds of Taylor’s TTPD. I nailed the sudoku. And every song.

    The time came for me to make dinner, and what can I say, I am an expert cook, but I do lack the Casswell skill of creating a recipe. I am a rule follower down to a T.

    The pasta salad was exemplary. Compliments to the chef aren’t good enough, as Lily says.

    I will spare you the end of her saying.

    We chilled during biscuit time, we laughed at Lily’s inability to dance nonchalantly, I showed off my two patented dance moves (the “Lego” and the “Swing” as they have been named), to the delight of my sisters: I famously can’t dance.

    We also looked for the mysterious light from yesterday (Allegra’s grandma who got set on fire and flown into the air, if you recall), to no avail. We did see the lights on the top of boat masts; mum declared it was to warn low flying planes. There was a moment of silence before we all laughed.

    Further discussions were had, for those who have seen Derry Girls then you know the character of Colm. Colm is Lily.

    She was talking about a reference, but went off on a a tangent and out loud wondered about if it was from bullet train, the movie, and how her friend quotes it all the time but oh wait, he says it in French so it can’t be from bullet train, but it certainly is something that would be at home in that film…

    It was funny.

    Then Lily got a laugh from dad when Allegra said “me and Tate, we’re on another level of comedy”, and Lily shot back, “what, a lower level?”

    It was funny, if sadly inaccurate.

    Finally a calm time came, I began to compose this here blog listening to the sweet sounds of Taylor’s ninth studio album, evermore. No skips.

    There you have it!

    And so this is where we pause our trek up Mount Olympus, folks.
    Bye family!!!
    Les mer

  • 280 km, off the top of my head

    31. juli, Hellas ⋅ 🌙 27 °C

    Welcome one, welcome all, back to Mount Olympus, may you catch the goats that roam freely through life’s path!

    Today began way too goddamn early. Lily woke me before the crack of dawn. Because she wanted to watch the crack of dawn from the beach.

    When I helpfully pointed out to her that the sun would be on the other side of the hill that surrounded the bay we were in, she was undeterred.

    So the four of us stumbled to the beach, sat on the beanbag type stuff that were laid out, and waited.

    For about an hour.

    The sky was light blue already, we could see where the sun was coming up, but Lily would not let us leave until we saw the sun itself.

    We amused ourselves by plane spotting. In that we saw one plane, Lily said it was a UFO because it was a “flying object that we couldn’t quite identify”. We placed bets as to how high up a plane was. In that Allegra bet it was 280 km high, “off the top of her head”. When I informed her that space began at the Karman line, aka 100km, she simply said, “it’s a UFO isn’t it?”.

    We walked a little way up the hill as the sun began to light up the top of the opposite hill. We sat on the floor and waited, watched a pack of five dogs running around. Tate tried to go back to bed many a time, as Lily ordered Allegra to pull her back.

    Finally, f i n a l l y , we saw the damn sun. And went back.

    Lily and I had breakfast, the twins went back to bed, and as we did nothing, we heard our parents alarm go off. We thought of them as weaklings for being tired when we had been up for three hours.

    We got ready in an hour before we strolled out the door to our car, ready for a thirty minute drive. It was a fun drive, even if the music was a tad questionable (and I do love to question Lily’s music taste).

    But thirty minutes later we made it to the town, parked, and strolled once more to the kayak place.

    That’s right, we’re sea kayaking! Or, well, fjord kayaking. I didn’t know fjords existed outside of Norway.

    Tate was giving Allegra a very cold shoulder since Allegra wanted to go with Lily and not her. So as I listened to my sisters argue loudly in my presence about who didn’t have to go with me, well, let’s say I felt *so* valued. I resolved to prove them all wrong by being the fastest and funnest kayak partner.

    Boy oh boy, did I live up to that. Or at least you’ll have to ask Tate since she was with me.

    We paddled along at a high speed, Tate vlogging with the go pro, and I managed to expertly stop the kayak right below the swing so Tate could climb on with ease.

    I am so the best.

    But we parked our kayaks, messed around, I was the first to stand on the swing and jump (well, sort of flop since I had no water shoes and hence no grip on the wet seat) into the water.

    Mum jumped from high up, I would put the height at a respectable 280 km, off the top of my head. I elected to do the same.

    I climbed up, still shoeless (everyone in my family has water shoes but me, since I am unloved), and then almost fell off due to slippy feet and no grippy shoes, so I sat down for a moment to calm my heart. After that, I realised I was quite content where I was, because the view was nice and there was no chance of falling, so I sat there despite the increasingly rude and mean comments of my family who wanted me to jump.

    Tate came up and she is nice, we chatted for a bit and then she jumped. After a while, I decided to jump too, and so I did.

    But we had to head off, more to the open ocean area, and Lily noticed that our kayaks were red, orange and yellow. So, for her F1 mind, Ferrari, McLaren, and Red Bull. This made us happy as Tate was Leclerc, I was Hamilton, Allegra was Tsunoda, and Lily was Verstappen. We raced, and of course Tate and I won, we were ahead the whole way. But since we were ahead, we took a wrong turn, and had to turn back, placing us behind for maybe half a minute. We then overtook them and passed ahead, but as we celebrated our victory, they informed us that the race apparently ended in the thirty seconds they were ahead.

    It’s 2021 Verstappen v Hamilton where the former was rigged to win all over again.

    But we made it quite far, and it was very deep water, it was just darkness. Our boat had quite a bit of water splashed into it, so I tried to empty it with my hat. Tate then said, “what if we just open this plug and let it drain out,” and then opened it. I made her close it pretty quick, because as mentioned in Brioche Bread, I am fairly terrified of deep water, and if the boat ever did sink, I would just die. In fact, the image of it drifting down into the darkness as I floated above it filled me with such terror that I had to impart it with Tate. We were then both terrified, and then we looked up, and what looked like a pirate ship was heading straight towards us.

    A lot of screeching ensued, as we fumbled for our paddles, tried to turn the boat and just generally get away, which thankfully we managed. We did not escape the brunt of the waves, and so we were rather tossed around, the boat tipping and splashing quite scarily, especially for the two of us who had freaked ourselves out over the thought of being in that deep deep water. How deep, you ask? Maybe 280 km. Off the top of my head.

    It is worth noting that, unbeknownst to us, our family was not going to come to where we were, they simply turned around without telling us. And they did not warn us of the boat.

    We paddled back to a boat, singing bopping tunes since the go pro lost battery (we can do a mean Mamma Mia 2 “Knowing me knowing you” duet) and finally caught up to our family as we pulled into a beach.

    At this beach, I snorkeled a little, didn’t ultimately like it, and went to hang with my tanning sisters.

    We were all half in half out the water, and it was very funny because I was leaning on my life jacket, and when the water would come in, it would make me float entirely, and when it would go out, it would just pull me away from the shore, before bringing me back with the next wave. It was entirely fun, and Lily said I looked hilarious and adorable, so. Life goals.

    Since it had been quite some time, we elected to head back. In the fjord, Tate and I decided to paddle into a small cave. It was… a cave. Yep. Still singing all the way, we fully paddled back, parked like pros, and hopped out.

    It took us twenty minutes to be all done, hand back lifejackets etc, but we were soon on our happy way.

    We stopped for lunch at a cute restaurant with an Australian owner who mum and dad were happy to chat with. He said they had many vegetarian stuff, including the moussaka. Dubious, I checked with the waitress, who assured me that it was vegetarian. Happy with this knowledge, I ordered it.

    Their fake meat must have been very realistic in taste and texture, because damn I could have sworn that was lamb!

    Does anyone know what vegetarian means these days?

    The food was rather tasty though, and afterwards they gave us a massive plate of watermelon. At one point, Dad was very disturbed by something that Tate said.

    But the time came for us to drive home, and similarly to before, the music was at times questionable. But when we got home, it was time to chill, mixed between reading, watching Percy Jackson for some (aka Lily), or working. I showered, and again got locked in the bathroom.

    I decided afterwards to hang out with dad outside and do a sudoku. I have grown quite bored of them, so many have I done, that I instead did some subpar yet still recognizable drawings on dad’s sudoku book of Le Poisson Steve which was a hilarious (in my opinion at least) French Instagram trend a few months back.

    The time came for dinner, and it was goddamn delicious. The twins made a salad and mmm it was so good that I asked for seconds, but there were none. I want to eat that salad for the rest of my life.

    During dinner some questionable conversations were had, and then fireworks went off! It was really pretty, and I decided that fireworks are one of mankind’s better inventions.

    But as the night grew later, I couldn’t find it in me to start the blog. I was feeling weirdly meh, I describe it as “restless leg syndrome of the soul”. It was weird.

    I can’t imagine what could have caused it, perhaps the barely five hours of sleep that I got last night?

    Anyway, so it was off to bed for me, and immediately lights out.

    And so this is where we pause our trek up Mount Olympus, folks.
    Bye family!!!
    Les mer

  • SALT AIR!!! AND THE RUST ON YOUR DOOR!!!

    1. august, Hellas ⋅ 🌬 27 °C

    Welcome one, welcome all, back to Mount Olympus, may you catch the goats that roam freely through life’s path!

    🎶SALT AIR!!! AND THE RUST ON YOUR DOOR!!! I’VE NEVER NEEDED ANYTHING MORRREEEE!!!!!!🎶

    That’s right girls and boys, it’s AUGUST! Aka the month to play Taylor Swift’s song “august” until your family can’t tolerate it any longer and kicks you out!

    Well, I awoke and decided to simply read in bed and relax, instead of getting up immediately as I usually do. These plans were quickly thwarted when, an hour later, Dad came in to wake me up. Of course he joked and jested about how my room was so big and he was “so far away that he couldn’t see me”.

    But sadly I had to get out of bed, because today was Self Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus Day! Or, S.C.U.B.A Day! (Also known as “S.C.U.B.A.D” but I couldn’t very well call it what sounds like a past tense verb when it had not yet happened; I would look to be a fool!).

    So after some time of doing nothing, I got up, got ready and we were off for the two minute walk down to the scuba place.

    It was all fairly simple, a matter of the guy giving us wetsuits that we had to put on (we all felt like Black Widow). Of course, Lily and Dad didn’t dive. They instead hung out without us and bonded over their strange love of coffee (what a yucky beverage).

    We then headed to the water, he gave us an explanation, and after putting heavy belts on, we were off!

    It was quite fun! I liked being chill on the bottom of the ocean, and Tate and leg did cool as well, but Mum kept floating to the surface, which she wasn’t happy about.

    It was quite funny, I’d do a quick look around, Tate is in my left, Leg is on my right, where is mum? And then I’d look up, and sure enough, she’s on the surface.

    I expertly avoided floating up by just breathing in or out, Tate got floated one time but she insists that I include how the guy was impressed that she didn’t panic when she filled her mask with water. Yay Tate!

    We saw a starfish (and held it, which I don’t know if that is good for them), a sea urchin, a bunch of fish, a weird flat sand coloured one, some millipede-looking pink stuff, and I saw a small octopus, but no one else did.

    I also watched Tate pick up a shell, look left to right to see if the guy was looking, and then tuck it in her wetsuit as if she was sneakily stealing a diamond ring or something.

    I was scandalised.

    45 minutes later we made our way out, and carried our heavy material from the water to the place: a clear testament to our strength.

    Dad and Lily regaled us with the story of when they got coffee and talked to the server about France. So.

    We didn’t have cash so they guy said we could get some from town and meet him there later, so we didn’t that, but first it was lunch time!!

    I recreated the twins’ salad from last night, twas delicious, as mum complained about how she wasn’t a huge fan of the diving.

    Which is understandable since the first time mum dove it was in the Great Barrier Reef, so, not the same level of nice.

    After lunch we chilled for an average amount of time before heading out to town to shop and to get cash for the dude. The shop was speedy, so we called the guy, and he was like, “yeah I’ll meet you in the square” and we were like, “where is the square” and he was like, “100 m from the supermarket”.

    Three tours of the town later, we decided to park next to what could be a square and then mum and dad got out, we waited for like 15 minutes and finally he showed up.

    It was weird tbh.

    But then, mum and dad were like, “let’s go see that thing that Lily and Ruby want to see, the petrified princess of telendos!” And basically it’s a mountain that looks like a woman’s face, so the Greeks made a myth that was about a girl in love with the prince of telendos, and she decided that she would find out if he lived her by lighting a candle (?) putting it in a tiny boat (??) floating it across the sea to the island of telendos (???) and if it went out, they weren’t meant to be (????).

    It’s a LONELY CANDLE ON A PRECARIOUS BOAT CROSSING THE SEA! OF COURSE IT’S GOING TO GO OUT!

    So she cried herself to death.

    Sadly the town that everyone says you can see it from is not in Google maps or Apple Maps. And there were no sign posts for it. We did find a place that apparently you can also see it from, so we drove there, to no joy, and drive back immediately, making hilarious jokes like, “is that her in the tree?” “Is that her on that signpost?” Etc. We truly are soooo funny.

    It was also funny because Tate has been repeating the TikTok sound “princess? Princess where areeee you?” So, of course we said that a few times.

    Anyway, as we drove home we passed an archaeological site, and they all pointed it out to me, and I happily exclaimed that it was the temple of Delian Apollo, the most important archaeological site on the island!

    After that quick glimpse as we drove, dad said, “never let anyone say we don’t take you anywhere, roo”.

    So we drove back home, and the maritime museum was open, something mum really wanted to see, so we did, and honestly, it was fairly average. There were coins and old diving suits and sponges and shells and pearls and puffer fish and sharks teeth and sharks heads and octopi and pots from shipwrecks and parts of an Italian airplane…

    All from one guy’s collection, who we found out was the father of this guy who owns a restaurant in the small town. And we had joked about him because we said “oh, it’s like he owns the whole town” and actually maybe he does.

    But he doesn’t own any aircon or more than one fan!

    Anyway, afterwards we went to a restaurant to get ice cream and drinks, Lily doesn’t like chocolate ice cream and I feel like if I didn’t like chocolate ice cream my soul would cry. They also bought our drinks out after we had all finished which I feel like is rather strange but what do I know, I never worked in hospo, unlike Lily.

    Lily and the twins got into an argument about something or other, the twins decided to go home before the rest of us when Lily turned out to be right, and then Lily and I lamented the fact that the twins didn’t find us cool and thought they were cooler than us.

    Of course, that’s not what we said, we listed off many “reasons” as to why they were annoying, and rude, and conformist, but that was the real reason behind it all.

    After that we went back home as well, Lily and I sat in the same chair as I wrote yesterday’s blog and she listened to Renee Rapp, or as we like to call her, Crenee Crapp.

    Mum fell asleep, so dad took a picture of her and I called out, “I smell a new profile pic!”, which is what we do on our family Signal group every time someone gets caught sleeping. Then dad went downstairs, and lo and behold, the twins were napping too. So, new profile pic!!

    But soon enough dad had to find his way around the kitchen for the first time in weeks, Lily recommended Apple Maps, and he made a very tasty pasta salad. Lily and I kept stealing feta chunks from the plate of feta, giggling all the while, and he used his famous “Oi!” On us many a time, but that did not stop us from sneaking more.

    Looking back, maybe the giggling was a flaw in our sneaky plans.

    Dinner was a fun affair, arguments were had because I made fun of Role Model (a singer that Lily likes), and she was then insulting Taylor Swift, so I defended Taylor Swift, and she insulted her more, and then I moved past it, but Lily evidently did not and argued with me the whole night.

    After biscuit time, we retreated inside, and my sisters all opted to lie on the floor as dad and wrote our blogs. They were going crazy, and the thing is, as you may know, Allegra took to calling me rumple, and my family has sort of picked it up, but now Allegra has decided to sometimes shorten it to rump. And of course, I took offense. Obviously. So I made a big deal about it, but then mum was like “if she actually cares you can’t call her that” and they said, “does rump actually bother you?” And obviously I don’t, not really because I am the best of all sports, so I said “no.” But then I remembered my annoyance at Lily, so I said, “but do you know what does? Lily.”

    And Tate replied, “well that’s alright, no one calls you that”.

    Everyone laughed uproariously. Even I, in my annoyance, was shocked by how funny that was. Tate is the best.

    But stuff was hashed out, I trapped Allegra in a hug for about five minutes (anytime Allegra willingly hugs you you have to keep her there because that’s all you’re getting for 3 months)

    And then it was bed time.

    And so this is where we pause our trek up Mount Olympus, folks.
    Bye family!!!
    Les mer

  • You may be sprite, you may be sprong

    2. august, Hellas ⋅ 🌙 25 °C

    Welcome one, welcome all, back to Mount Olympus, may you catch the goats that roam freely through life’s path!

    I write to you today despite the fact that not too much has happened and despite how tired my eyes are.

    They are very tired.

    So today I awoke, joyous since we had three hours before we had to leave. I spent one of them lying in bed reading, the next lying in a sofa upstairs reading, and the last quickly moving around, showering, packing, checking for lost things.

    At one point, it was funny because Mum said, “I may as well make use of this aircon one last time”, and it turned on with a happy little tune, so mum said with great disgust, “happy little bugger”, but then stood in front of it and dramatically flung out her arms and tipped her head upwards like some sort of Christ the Redeemer.

    I laughed. No one else witnessed this moment and I felt a strong need to include it in the blog.

    We got ready and then had some time to relax. Lily and I were being vaguely mean to each other in the nicest way possible. I squeezed into a tiny space next to Allegra en Dad, smooshing them both, as I wheedled Allegra into letting me watch Shadow and Bone with her on the boat (since my phone is dead).

    Lily then said to Dad, “if my child had just taken all my space, I would be saying, ‘why didn’t I abort?’”. Mum got a bit annoyed with her at this, but then I knocked his sunglasses off, and Dad turned to me and solemnly said, “why didn’t I abort?”

    We laughed.

    I continued to ask Allegra in increasingly whiny tones as I am famous for, if Lily is to be believed. Everyone was telling her to not give in.

    Then dad knocked my hat off my head. I told him as much, and he said, “why wasn’t I aborted?”

    We laughed again.

    As we walked out the door, I had not yet given up, and Allegra was won over by my charm and quick wit, and finally said yes. Yay!

    So we made our way to the main town for the last time, dropped off our car, the guy nicely let us leave our bags in the shop while we killed three hours, that’s right, we are the fabled Murderers of Time, and we strolled around.

    We bought a magnet, we walked through some sketchy back alleys, Lily and I talked
    about moving to Paris, and then we sat down for a drink at a very nice and cool looking restaurant after all the assassination had been completed.

    But upon a glance at the menu, we could not resist getting food. Lily and I shared a vegan ciabatta, it was so good (deep fried shitake, or, as Allegra reads it, sh*t cake). Dad had a tasty tasty salad, Tate had something with chicken, and mum had an eggs Benedict with not enough hollandais sauce (mum usually asks for extra on the side) so she made a very sad face. It was heartbreaking.

    But damn was our food tasty as can be!

    As we ate, many a “funny” conversation was had. One example is when I told Lily that she pronounced “prodigy” wrong (she had told a story earlier about her dream in which Tate was an f1 “progidy” and Max Verstappen came to recruit her). Allegra said, with great derision, “it’s progidy”, Lily agreed with me, “no it’s prodigy” and Allegra said, with more disgust, “well that’s f***ing stupid”. We all laughed.

    Another example is when I had a different lemonade brand than sprite, my all time fave, much to mum’s chagrin, and Dad said, “you cut off your nose to sprite your face”. Not for any reason, just because he wanted to incorporate the word sprite into a sentence. Lily then proposed “in sprite of the fact”, I offered a more accurate usage, “water sprites”, and Dad sighed and said, “you may be sprite, you may be sprong”.

    You now understand the speech marks around the word “funny”.

    We had some more time, so we walked along to the docks.

    And with great horror, we saw a half sunken boat. And underneath it, a fully sunken boat. And underneath that, another fully sunken boat.

    It freaks me out a lot, to see abandoned stuff. I stared in morbid fascination and mounting horror until I was pulled along.

    There was one piece of wood that stuck off the edge of the docks, a small way over the water, and Tate said, “haha, I’ll walk the plank”.

    She didn’t. But we made it to a beach, turned around to head back, passed it again, and I told her to put her money where her mouth was. Everyone in the family told her not to, that it was dangerous, but I had sufficiently egged her on, so she stood on it. I stood on the part on land, to stop it from flipping. I begged anyone to take a picture, as she edged further out despite complaints from the family.

    And then we heard a loud crack. Tate scrambled back onto the safety of land. Her eyes told of fear and a feral will to survive.

    I wonder what could have happened had I stepped off the wooden plank at that time. Haha.

    But the time came to head back, pick up our bags, and wait for our ferry. It was a fairly boring wait, I will spare you the details. And then we got in the boat, managed to secure seats, and I watched Shadow and Bone with Allegra, on my headphones since they are earbuds and not headphones like hers, so we could share.

    After mayhap one episode, we paused to play the music charades game (when one person has headphones and acts out the words until the other guesses the song) to Gracie Abrams’ The Secret of Us. But rookie mistake on my part: we used Allegra’s headphones because they are better quality. And after the album was through, we watched Shadow and Bone again. But Allegra did not let me connect my headphones. So I had to read subtitles. But I tired of that, so I decided to see how far I could get into Hamilton before I didn’t know a song by heart.

    It was three songs: I am a failure.

    Finally we arrived at Rhodes, opening a wide possibility for jokes. Watch out for Dad’s blog titles. I prefer to say “James Rhodes?” Every time someone says Rhodes, because I am Marvel obsessed.

    My sisters sometimes then say, “You mean James Rose” as a reference to that time we played Empires with the Australian family and they misheard me; my correcting lead to my downfall.

    Anyway.

    A fifty minute drive listening to the bopping tunes of mgk was next. We saw many, many abandoned houses and buildings and even an entire abandoned apartment complex? I was very freaked out.

    We also passed four hitchhiking guys, dad said “sorry dudes, not today”, so all four of us turned around to see them, and Allegra then said, “uhh, let’s turn around!” Because they were rather good looking.

    We all laughed. Allegra is funny.

    We made it to our final place with no small amount of difficulty, but it was very nice, and they had bread, cheese, butter, and ham. My sisters and I made ourselves sandwiches (with or without ham depending on our vegetarianism), but then Mum and Dad informed us of the time: after 7!

    I have no concept of time.

    We went out for dinner and stopped at the first place we saw. I upgraded my can tab collection (I now have 51) and dinner was quite tasty, and altogether twas a fun time. Tate and leg took some pictures of some cats that were wandering around. We had desert, I will spare you Lily’s thoughts on Apple Pie, although the baklava was delicious!

    And then we stopped at a supermarket in the way home to collect breakfastables, which is where I found my 51st can tab on the floor (because of Lily, I keep almost calling them Tan Cabs).

    The walk home was fun, although dark, and we passed an abandoned building that freaked me out. What is wrong with Rhodians and abandoning their buildings?

    But once we arrived safely home, I tried to write the blog despite my tiredness. And I failed, due to said tiredness.

    Everyone except me had a night swim, the twins and Lily were going kind of crazy doing “cardio” and such, and I chilled with the fam trying to get an opening line for my blog.

    Eventually the time came for bed. And we slept. Hence me writing this blog retroactively.

    And so this is where we pause our trek up Mount Olympus, folks.
    Bye family!!! 🤚
    Les mer

  • So Rachel said to the Paleontologist

    3. august, Hellas ⋅ 🌙 25 °C

    Welcome one, welcome all, back to Mount Olympus, may you catch the goats that roam freely through life’s path!

    Today was, by all accounts (aka mine), a good one.

    Indeed, I awoke to soft sunlight filtering through the high window in mine and Lily’s room. As I like to do, I did nothing for perhaps five minutes, before I picked up mum’s phone with the intention of writing the blog.

    I was in a very happy mood, so when Lily got up (complaining about a terrible sleep due to a green exit light (she has an eye mask but apparently the knowledge that it was there kept her awake), I joyously got up with her and was just very cheery, so I was making her laugh and I was being very “goofy” as Lily kept saying, even though I secretly hate that word.

    I made myself some toast, but the toaster burnt the toast 😔 so I had burnt toast! Which I secretly kinda love. All my secrets are coming out today!

    As Lily and I ate breakfast at the breakfast bar, as dad called it, I felt very Adult™️ and Mature™️ because we discussed how people should pursue their dreams and not get stuck in what they think they want, but don’t actually care about and so put little effort into achieving, and then get stuck in a cycle of not caring so not trying hard so not getting fulfillment so not caring etc etc. What interesting conversations we have.

    I then stated that Franco was a rip off dictator, which is probably super insensitive since I’m sure many people died, but I have never learnt about him so I don’t know anything about him except that he gave his power back to the monarchy that he took it from when he died, which is not the dictator vibe. Anyway.

    I then did sit down to write my blog, as mum and dad made plans for the day. The agreement was to go to Kamiros. As Lily said, “so Rachel said to the Paleontologist”.

    I blogged for ages. Hours upon hours of hard work, toiling away. As a hilarious Instagram post once said, the children yearn for the mines.

    Lily is chuckling right now. She loves that post.

    The rest of the family swam in the little pool, but I wasn’t in a pool mood, so I kept them company, writing the blog still. We played the Ginger song that I believe Gina linked in that DAMN GINGER BOY, which we took a moment to understand but we found it really funny.

    I finished the blog and just chilled, laughing at my foolish sisters as they did “Edna running” in the pool.

    But the time came to go out, so we got ready (there was a real battle over who got to wear what clothes; I could have Lily’s skirt if she got to wear Allegra’s skirt that Allegra was wearing; so I had no skirt and asked to wear Allegra’s other skirt, Allegra said hmm, let me think, and then she finally said yes and Lily said, you can wear my skirt. Anyway) and we hopped into our car and drove away!

    Well, after maybe a five minute struggle with the remote controlled gate, which we couldn’t get to close all the way, we accidentally opened another gate, and I wouldn’t be surprised if we had somehow opened a portal to hell that will unleash a horde of demons.

    But the drive was fun, although not bopping. I did ask for music, but Lily who was a little antsy because she was worried we might not be back in time to watch the F1 race, said shortly, “there’s nothing wrong with a bit of silence”.

    I refer you to “don’t put this in the blog”, when Lily couldn’t stand the silence. We all laughed at this.

    Anyway, I myself wasn’t feeling the silence so I named some interesting things that perplex me (such as, our body is not us, our brain is us, our body is just a shell), but mum escalated it and we ended up in an argument slash discussion that we have had before about living in the moment (I think it’s not a sustainable way of living. Mum thinks it’s the only way to be truly happy).

    This annoyed many, but we stopped when we stopped (hehe) in a small town to get some lunch. After a little struggle, we made it out with some cheese puffs and a bread roll with raisins. As dad said, no gourmet meal. As Lily said, peasants back in the day would be eating like kings.

    We drove to our destination, ancient Kamiros, which I was very happy about, because it was this ancient city that was uncovered by the Italians when they controlled Greece in the 1920s, and I was overjoyed to be seeing it.

    It was really really cool. There was a temple, a bunch of houses, the town square, honestly I just loved it. I love it because it makes you realise how important and unimportant you are in the scale of humanity. 10/10 feeling.

    Me, mum and dad slowly strolled around, looking at everything, reading the signs etc. My sisters did not care for it much, so they speeded ahead. We would only see them in spots of shade where they deigned to wait for us.

    At one pointed they stopped under an impressive tree, and dad hugged it. Dad is a lover, as we know from Give Puys a Chance.

    Dad kept cracking jokes. Such as “that restaurant has been well preserved!”

    One time me and a dad unwittingly and then wittingly walked in places we weren’t supposed to (the rope barring it off was very misleading, what can I say?), so for a moment we felt like people of old, waking through the streets.

    Who knew the people of old had such developed phones?

    And by that I mean, dad and I took a selfie. I said I would title it, “dad and his favourite daughter” and dad said he would too.

    Turns out he lied.

    Anyway, we saw my sisters again at the exit point, and when we asked, “what should we do now?” Allegra immediately said, “I suggest, a family skibidi dance?”

    I would like to say we all shook our heads in derision. That we scorned her for suggesting such an immature thing, and flounced off maturely, knowing we were superior to the rabble who partake in “skibidi dancing”.

    But instead, we all immediately formed a family dance circle, and skibidi danced like our life depended on it.

    And let’s say, if our life depended on it, dad would have been the death of us all. He couldn’t quite get his knees to wobble in the way us younguns could. But heckity darn did he give it a try.

    Skibidi dance over, we received a few glances from the surrounding visitors (I like to think they were impressed), and made our way back to the car.

    In the car, Lily said that when I sing it’s “obnoxious” and “annoying”. So. Obviously I can never sing again, only cry.

    We found a supermarket, and happily found some WEETABIX! That’s right folks, the most delicious breakfast (barring crumpets of course), something I haven’t eaten in way too long, weetabix!! One last box, Lily joyously laughed as she grabbed it.

    Yay!!

    We got back home (passing the freaky abandoned buildings), and quickly dove in the pool.

    It was very fun, there was a life saver ring thing, you know the stuff they throw in movies, and Allegra sat in it, but she flipped upside down, and it was hilarious because it sort of happened in slo mo, and all we saw was her horrified face and then her butt. It was really really funny.

    Anyway.

    The time came to set up f1. Lily was fiddling away with dad in the computer and tv, and we managed to connect them!

    And I was impressed with her, right up until she walked right into a door, like a bird. Yes it was clear, but still.

    I laughed so hard.

    So me, dad and Lily watched f1. My man Hamilton did not advance nor drop in place, much to my chagrin. I feel bad for the guy who referred to himself as “useless. Absolutely useless”.

    Which was hilarious, but still.

    Then Lily went back in the pool, the twins were still tanning. Me and mum stayed inside, me reading and mum working, but after mayhap an hour it got too hot so I did go outside and swim in the pool.

    We then played some uno, and there was a lot of disagreement on the rules (dad wanted to play basic version, Lily wanted to play the version with a few extra things (such as plus 2 on plus 2) and I wanted to play the version with more extra things (such as every time a 0 is played you switch your hand with your neighbour)).

    We did not play my version.

    But in the second round, the twins and I invented the rule of 7s: if anyone plays a 7, everyone has to dab. If you don’t, you pick up 7 cards.

    Mum decided she was exempt from this rule.

    Dad went out on a 7. His dab was as spectacular as it was smug.

    We had to do another patented Simpson dance circle, since some bopping tunes were being played. The moves were fantabulous, if I do say so myself, although mum kept saying we should push someone in the pool from their chair, so we all scootched away.

    And then the parents went to make dinner, a pasta salad I was told, and the twins practiced their pool dance routine that they are planning for the “cinnamon spice latte dance comp in downtown Connecticut” or whatever.

    I helped ofc.

    Dinner came around, and I joyously dug in to the pasta salad, one of my favourite meals because of a distinct lack of onion and courgette.

    Imagine my surprise when I taste the very vegetables that I despise.

    As miserable as a girl on a four week holiday in Greece could be (so, the very saddest people on earth really), I picked them out one by one, so that I could eat my pasta salad in peace, to the frequent eye rolls of my family.

    I don’t think “refined taste” is an excuse I can use anymore at this point.

    After dinner, I did a lot of dancing because my favourite songs were playing (Taylor Swift of course), but eventually I did have to sit down and start the blog.

    It was all going so well, I would have finished the blog that night, but the twins had gone to bed (mystical magical by Benson Boone started playing, you see), and when I went to ask Allegra for something, I gave Tate a hug, and then got a lil bit sad about next year when they won’t be here ☹️, so I did cry about that and to cheer me up Lily willingly played some Hamilton songs, so really the takeaway is that I just need to work on my fake crying and it’ll be Hamilton all round! Yayyy!!!

    And then I never started writing the blog again, because mum saw the video of dad doing the skibidi dance and laughed so hard for so long, I have never heard mum laugh like that, for five minutes or more, it was genuinely amazing, and to be fair, I laughed too so it is understandable.

    And so this is where we pause our trek up Mount Olympus, folks.
    Bye family!!! 👌
    Les mer