Day 11: Free Day at Marathonos Beach
Right on the tail end of our life changing Meteora trip, we were all given the choice of relaxation, refueling, and reflection at the college or at the beach at Marathonos. I chose the beach with 13 others! We woke up early, (Kalimera) did an early wash of laundry, hung it on the line, and jumped on the bus.
Every bus driver has been wonderful, and today did not disappoint. He was so proud of where he was from that he shared some insights over the loudspeaker and took a detour from our route to show us the area where his parents lived. It was another quaint city on the seaside of Greece.
A few sat, walked, swam, and waded in the water. While walking on the beach, it did not have shells; it had many smooth rocks. It reminded me of when I was a child; we called them “worry stones”. We would go to Gatlinburg and find them in the streams. My mom would always tell me to keep it in my pocket, and when I had a worry, I could rub the stone, and my worry would go away.
The only worry I had was the storm rolling in. It was nothing like home since it was clouds and drizzle. But like a well-planned tour, we walked over to lunch at a table under a canopy on the beach. As we waited for our food, we heard from the other team at the college. They had helped others by taking clothes off the line before the rain and then enjoyed sandwiches in town. Each had reports of relaxing, reflecting, and refueling for the next adventure tomorrow.
The food came at this restaurant that Dom recommended, and it did not disappoint. Fried cheese, plates of 4 different dips, fish, chicken kabobs, calamari, fries, and tzatziki was a cultural emersion that we all cherished. Some of the local cats enjoyed it as they played along the beach and begged from below our feet. We wrapped up the day as we always do with some gelato and ice cream, and today they shared a plate of Loukoumades that was like beignets from New Orleans with more honey and syrup.
Today, we are halfway.
We will continue to deconstruct and understand. Rebuild as we better understand ourselves and
others. Cultural emersion within Greece
and within ourselves. Through my battles
in life, I would have never dreamed of being on a beach in Greece, enjoying
such a dream of a day. It was not supposed
to happen. Three to five years, they
said. Words that change your life in the
way that you chose them to. I look
around at the gift from God that has been given to me. A beautiful day, with beautiful people with lovely
food. I have learned that nothing is
promised to us. Every day is a gift, and
while some days we wish we had a return option, this one was a blessed gift to
me and the cohort around me. My story is
just one, and while I carry my burdens, so many others carry their own. One is not
greater than another. While our burdens
alone seem heavy, when we are together, the burden is lightened when we all carry
them together.
Each day is a rich and precious gift from God, with new
grace and new opportunities. “This is the day the Lord has made; we will
rejoice and be glad in it.”. Psalm 118:24.
Thank you for your acceptance and the fun so far,
Shelly Persson








I love hearing about the relationships being built and how one's perspective begins to influence another's. Beautiful description, Shelly. Also, I am salivating as you describe the cuisine!!
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