Living the Life We Were Never Taught to Choose: Anastasia Lambis
FEB 20, 202652 MIN
Living the Life We Were Never Taught to Choose: Anastasia Lambis
FEB 20, 202652 MIN
Description
Growing up as a daughter of Greek immigrants in Adelaide meant learning the rules before you ever heard them spoken. The rules were subtle but powerful: Be careful, choose security, don’t draw too much attention to yourself, and above all, don’t take unnecessary risks. In this beautifully honest and story-driven conversation, Anastasia reflects on what it was like to grow up under those invisible expectations. While her parents loved and protected her fiercely, there was an unspoken understanding that stability mattered more than passion.Music became her quiet rebellion.From childhood memories of ABBA and Elvis playing in the background to a lifelong devotion to Prince, music was not just entertainment — it was identity, expression and possibility. Growing up without many material luxuries shaped her appreciation for creativity. With no record player at home, she would record albums onto cassette tapes at her godfather’s house. These small rituals built a deep emotional connection to storytelling and sound.Her creative journey began unexpectedly in 2011 with a simple food club idea. That experiment evolved into the blog Tempting Palates, then into social media influence, and eventually into reviewing and interviewing artists during the Adelaide Fringe. What began as food writing gradually expanded into music journalism — proof that passion grows when nurtured.Beneath the travel stories and backstage moments lies courage. Anastasia speaks openly about choosing security through banking and later working in a school — “good jobs” by cultural standards — before recognising that something still felt incomplete. When redundancy offered an exit, she chose growth over fear. Her parents’ panic reflected their generation’s survival mindset. But she chose fulfilment.This episode beautifully captures the tension so many Italian-Australian and Greek-Australian daughters understand: honouring your parents’ sacrifices while refusing to live inside their fears.From flying solo to London to see Nile Rodgers on her birthday, to travelling to the United States to attend concerts and meet artists, Anastasia reframed midlife as expansion rather than limitation. These were not just holidays — they were declarations of independence.The conversation also revisits Adelaide in the 80s and 90s — cousins as first friends, camping at Port Vincent, Victor Harbour picnics, nightclub culture, strict curfews and subtle control. There is humour, nostalgia and deep recognition.At its heart, this episode is about permission.No one gives it to you. You take it.Living your best life, for Anastasia, means travel, music, new experiences, stepping beyond comfort zones and refusing to shrink to make others comfortable.This is not rebellion against culture — it is evolution within it.Brought to you by Shining Light