WOMENSTOURSCRETE
- Professional Certified and Licensed Tour Guide.
- National Trainer of Federation of European Guides.
- Member of contact zone of Mary Louise Pratt.
- Training seminar "Crete for All" on Accessible Tourism, aligned with European ESG standards, and ISO 21902:2021
- Certified Basic Life Support (BLS) Provider- Emergency Response & First Aid (European Resuscitation Council)
- +306977455930
HER The earliest memory I have of myself … is diffused with the light of my country (and found through all out the Eastern Mediterranean) and the sweet scent of the soil in spring, as I sat listening to the bees. The light reaches directly into the soul, opening all the doors and windows of ones heart. One feels exposed naked in a metaphysical bliss and all is clear without somehow being known. I bathed in this light much earlier than my favorite element and word The Sea! I had a box full of praying mantises that needed feeding: I found them so fascinatingly beautiful! In my native tongue they are known as the ‘Horses of the Virgin Mary’. I absolutely loved horses, with their far-away eyes, but why on earth would the Virgin Mary choose such a mount? I wondered what a obscure vision it must be to see the Virgin Mary riding such a strange creature each time I found them and tucked them away into my cardboard box wanting to observe them better. -Greece in the 1970s was the cradle of my childhood. My parents travelled the Greek islands – museums and ancient sites by day, with Leonard Cohen taking hold of their nights.We where all wrapped up in thick veil of cigarette smoke, as they played cards: the one that lost had to wash the dishes. I was without realizing it emerging into an Era, a culture, a way of life and understanding that shaped me for the rest of my life. Words such as Democracy, dictators, kings and invasion were people that visited us frequently in the evenings. It took me a long time to recognize their faces finally, but once I did I never forgot them. It was then that I was given my first music tape by George( My father)of Edith Piaf – and was I chuffed! I used to descend on my parents in the evenings while playing cards wearing Elizabeth’s( My mother)shoes in a black t-shirt singing at the top of my voice claiming the night and the attention triumphantly. I thought Leonard sounded like a tom cat on a roof, that smoked Assos Export cigarettes, non-stop! I revised that opinion later on in life … Today both the little sparrow and Leonard are two of my favorite artists and the springtime of my life as I enter autumn. A large part of my escape-route while in Greece to happiness was by playing in ancient sites, picking up pottery sherds or gazing on ancient statues for hours. That is when I learned the art of gentle stillness and clarity of the moment. The Greek myths for my imagination and shrimps for my belly is what I was dished out with, as my parents with their friends enjoyed their ouzo and meze in the cafenions at the sites and museums, discussing what else politics! Once I finally acquired names (and stories) to go with these statues that looked straight through me with their melancholic eyes, I fell down my personal ‘rabbit hole’ – and part of me has until now refused to return … I learned to speak later than was expected of me: it happens we were told when many tongues are spoken in one household. But Greek came to be for me and still Is the language of infinite blue, of tsikadas, wine, fresh limewashed houses sliding down a mountain like bread crumbs on a tablecloth, a glass of water on a hot summer day and August figs, giagias (old little ladies in black )with raisin-like eyes amidst the wrinkles of their lives – and above all, the overlapping of drama and comedy in almost every aspect of everyday life. Somehow life and death like a night with two moons in Greek is seen observed felt as if rehearsed as it has been done centuries now. (A night with two moons a sky with fish verse of famous Greek song) -In this way the ancient ways become an everyday reality in modern times, the unusual even can be accepted as usual. Everything in Greek carried with it strong emotions and melded together strongly connected: from the preparation of food to the quaffing of a final coffee or cognac. Nothing was just ‘this or that’. I realized all this but gradually, as the quality of the air and rhythms of being changed, upon my learning the use of a different tongue. I also learned the ways of the world, the ways of people, the ways of violence, the ways of hatred, the ways of success, the ways of power so many of these ways a source of great pain, conflict and destruction. But my work always made sure I was in her realm in her presence even if I was absent at the time. Either in museums and ancient sites She was there as we swam round her like a school of fish silently as I guided hopefully, eager visitors. Indeed, it was not until years later I realized that even if I stood outside of, and at best beside, Her — that She always inhabited me. As She has done for centuries: commun(icat)ing but not being really heard, seen but not fully perceived — until she grew silent and solemn, and we deaf and blind as a result. It was an apocalypse when I realized that I had her on the tip of my tongue all these years when I finally recognized HER and in the middle of my sentence as I was describing HER to my group the unbroken mistress and goddess without mercy all in one had her celestial glow once again.
- Professional Certified and Licensed Tour Guide
- Member of contact zone of Mary Louise Pratt.
-
Training seminar "Crete for All" on Accessible Tourism, aligned with European ESG standards, and ISO 21902:2021
- Certified Basic Life Support (BLS) Provider- Emergency Response & First Aid (European Resuscitation Council)
Since childhood I would linger on the details: I kept pebbles of curious shapes, seashells that smelled of the sea, jasmine blossoms that mingled with thyme in my palms. I still collect small fragments of memory: a falling leaf, a changing shadow, a scent that awakens an entire world. In this way I learned to find poetry within the insignificant.
I was born in Crete, in Heraklion, where I went to school, where I learned to laugh. Later in Athens I searched for truth at the university. My Asia Minor roots always made me gaze towards the other side of the Aegean. They made me think, to wonder what a border is and why it exists. This blend of my origins, like two seas that meet and never cease to ripple within me, shaped my love for history. I studied the Turkish language and history in order to see beyond borders, to hear the bridges that unite different cultures.
Later, photography became a second eye; through the lens I began to compose images and tell stories. I learned to observe the real world around me with patience. I began to walk in search of new images, new people, new uncharted stories. Nature taught me that only by walking do you realize how vast the world is—and yet, when you meet a friend along your path, how small it can become. Nature taught me to set goals, not to hurry, to respect her, to intertwine with her rhythm.
The stories of simple, everyday people are what draw me most—the microhistories of the heroes of daily life. Through the actions of these people we perceive the evolution of history from another perspective. It is not always the warriors or the politicians who shape and write history. If you close the book and look beyond it, another world unfolds: a world of anti-heroes, who were never cast in statues, whose names were never given to squares, yet who carried the weight of future generations on their backs.
I decided to become a guide: to connect all the dots I carry within me, to weave the lines that unite us, to make my visitors feel that they belong to a larger whole. To see the past and nature with a different gaze. Because our behaviors, fears, and expectations repeat themselves, like pulses resonating from age to age. History is not something foreign, old, or detached from us—it is a chain that surrounds us, runs through us, and defines us. It demands constant awareness, vigilance, and dialogue, because understanding it helps us to comprehend today, the world around us—and ourselves.
After all, civilizations and their forms are but a single breath in the vast history of the universe—and we, for a moment, become mirrors of that memory.
Come, let us explore it together…
- Professional Certified and Licensed Tour Guide
- Member of contact zone of Mary Louise Pratt.
-
Training seminar "Crete for All" on Accessible Tourism, aligned with European ESG standards, and ISO 21902:2021
I’m Calliope which means the “beautifully-voiced” in Greek. Who would have thought that a name taken by a Muse would follow me in so many ways in my life?
As a young girl, I was often caught reading a book in search of understanding the past cultures, the modern complexities or even immersing into fantastic worlds. Music –the art of the Muses- was the one I cherished most along with dance and theatre, thus expressing myself in various ways.
In my professional life, as a teacher of English and French I used my voice to enhance foreign language learning and as a translator I gave authors a voice in another language enabling the reader’s connection to the story and foster empathy across cultures. While travelling, I always visited museums, the “shrine of the Muses” in Greek Antiquity, initially a place for philosophical study and inspiration.
When I was at a point in my life where my need for challenge and growth no longer aligned with my former career, I became a licensed tour guide. This gave me the chance through my new voice to tell the history of my country, to show the world our nature, our culture, our people.
During this amazing experience, I met my mentor Ioanna and other passionate women who share the same vision: through people’s stories you better know yourself.
So why women’s stories? Their stories have been forgotten and their role in history has been underrated.
Calliope was the Muse who inspired poets to tell stories of love and war, gods and heroes, wins and losses. Today, I feel the time has come for the women’s stories to be heard in order to motivate and empower other women.
I am Esther or Astarte or Ishtar, because that is the root of my name.
I was born and raised in Crete, with the Minoan Earth pulsating at my feet.
In the green of the trees and in books.
My first memories were of my grandmother’s herbs, scents woven with wet soil and warm bread baked in the wood-fired oven, but the warmth of our souls filled us more.
The first sounds of the traditional poem of Erotokritos. My grandmother sang it to me so that my sleep would be sweet.
The first walks in the archaeological sites of the island. Everywhere the whisper of the Earth welcoming me.
I studied in Rome for the eternal journey of learning, history, archaeology.
I studied distant civilizations and traveled with my mind. The duty is to transmit knowledge full of scents and images.
I come from the depths of time, and I narrate its passage with all the awareness of the feminine presence on this Planet.
In my studies I always sought esotericism, the need of man for connection with the Higher and his memory, where he came from, where he is headed and especially if he evolves.
I felt that the women of the past needed their truth to be expressed, to find their space in the story.
Through this process, catharsis, healing occurs.
The center of everything is the woman, their stories, their voice.
Through the story, the connection with the present, we hear the steps of time and above all we remember our importance.
The journey through time,is not just a story to tell, but an experience to live, to feel and through it ,to be liberated.
A debt to my grandmother who taught me the power of women, the remembrance of all the generations that brought our steps to the present.
The feminine energy waits patiently because it knows its power. Women have been silent for quite some time.
It is time to tell their story: Mothers, Women, Fighters, Goddesses, Healers, Amazons and Queens, Priestesses and Prophetess, scientists, rebels… time for them to find their true place in History. We owe it to them… .
- Professional Certified and Licensed Tour Guide
- Member of contact zone of Mary Louise Pratt.
-
Training seminar "Crete for All" on Accessible Tourism, aligned with European ESG standards, and ISO 21902:2021
- Certified Basic Life Support (BLS) Provider- Emergency Response & First Aid (European Resuscitation Council)
My name is Eleonora, born and raised in Thessaloniki, Greece. I grew up in a family with a global perspective-we moved and lived in several countries before settling in Greece, which inspired my early love for travel, stories, and exploration.
Driven by my curiosity and a passion for discovery, I studied archaeology and later specialized as a geoarchaeologist, focusing on the environment, sustainabilty, and how the Minoans interacted with their world.
My research explores social roles and identities in the Late Bronze Age Crete, combining scientific insight with a fascination for human stories.
I became a tour guide in order to share these human stories-so the lives, dreams and everyday moments of people of the past are not forgotten. This manner history can be brought to life and we can be connected to the real people behind the ruins.
Beyond my academic pursuits, I have participated in excavations and published articles in my field.
Join me on a tour to unlock the secrets of ancient Crete together!!
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Ioanna Kalypso @ Womenstourscrete
Ioanna Kalypso
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