This blog is a personal and historical journey through Northern Greece—a place where my family roots run deep, and where past and present often blur in quiet, powerful ways.
My grandparents were Cappadocian Greeks, born in what is now Turkey, and part of the Greek population displaced during the 1923 population exchange. Their stories, and those of their generation, were passed down in fragments—memories, songs, dialects, and family sayings. Over the years, I’ve been piecing those fragments together, both through travel and through stories told at home.

The blog brings together experiences, reflections, and historical traces from this region. It’s not a tourist guide. It’s a living archive of personal and cultural memory—drawn from family history, village visits, and the deeper layers of landscape and language that surround Pella and beyond.
A key source of inspiration has been O Tata, the autobiography of my grandfather. My father compiled it from my grandfather’s handwritten notes and published it in 2014. That book has been a goldmine for understanding who we are and where we came from—and it continues to guide my explorations.
About Me
I’m a voice actor, writer, and user experience strategist and designer. My background sits at the intersection of storytelling and systems—finding the through-lines, whether in a narrative or a digital interface.
