Somehow, without our permission, our tween officially became a teen. And instead of a birthday party with balloons, a cake covered in questionable amounts of frosting, and ten friends sleeping over in our living room, she got something else: a gap-year birthday in Sicily.
Translation: no streamers, but plenty of gelato.
When youâre traveling long-term, birthdays look different. You donât have the party favors, the Pinterest-y decorations, or even the ability to remember which drawer in your Airbnb has candles (spoiler: none of them). But you do have the world outside your front door, which makes for a pretty solid Plan B.
So, for her first teenage birthday, we gave her what every newly-minted 13-year-old truly wants: a Yes Day.
- “Can we skip homeschooling today?” Yes.
- “Can I get a Monster?” Yes.
- âCan we go to Nino’s for pizza?â Yes.
- “Can we watch Stranger Things? Yes.
- âCan we go get gelato?â Yes. Always Yes.
- âCan I spend $20 on Roblox? Ugh. Yes.
And that was itâher dream birthday. No party games, no candles to rush through, no fuss. Just an ocean view, a perfect pizza, and gelato for dessert. Simple, easy, and exactly what she wanted.
A Quick Parent Gush đ
Somewhere between asking for extra gelato and quietly taking in the Mediterranean sea view beside us, our kiddo crossed a line: sheâs not a little kid anymore. Weâve watched her handle long travel days, language barriers, and the occasional âno Wi-Fi panicâ with more resilience than some adults we know.
Sheâs funny, strong-willed, endlessly curious, and (when she wants to be) incredibly kind. Weâre so proud of the person sheâs becomingâadventurous enough to try new foods, patient enough to navigate unfamiliar places, and still sweet enough to want her birthday to be a family Yes Day instead of something flashy.
We love this kid fiercely, and we couldnât imagine a better place to celebrate the start of her teenage years than in Sicily, where everything tastes a little sweeter.
Do Sicilians Have Birthday Traditions?
We did a little digging (because when youâre traveling, you want to get it right). Turns out Sicilians donât have elaborate birthday rituals like smashing piñatas or wearing cardboard crowns, but there are a few customs worth noting:
- đ Cake still matters. But in Sicily, the classic birthday dessert isnât always cakeâit can be a cassata (a sponge cake layered with ricotta and candied fruit) or even gelato cake. We⊠went with gelato. Zero regrets.
- đ Family is the centerpiece. Birthdays here are less about the big crowd and more about eating together. Luckily, weâre three strong and very good at eating.
- đ The gift? Honestly, just being in Sicily felt like a present big enough. Though she might argue that saying âyesâ to extra gelato was the real win. Still, we managed to surprise her with a little somethingâsome Stranger Things merch from Amazon Italia. She wasnât expecting anything, which made her wide-eyed reaction all the sweeter.
So, while she didnât get a full-blown birthday party, she did get something more fitting: a day built around her. And maybe thatâs the lesson from traveling birthdaysâyou donât have to replicate home traditions. Sometimes, you just adopt a new one.
| Syps Family Travel Tip Box: Celebrating Birthdays Abroad đ Pick a local treat. Swap the standard birthday cake for whatever the country does bestâcannoli in Sicily, churros in Spain, mochi in Japan. Instant memory. đ Donât stress about âthe perfect party.â The adventure itself is the gift. đ Document it differently. Take a photo with something iconic from that place instead of candlesâlike holding a gelato in front of Mount Etna. đ Involve home. A quick video call with family and friends makes it feel connected, even across oceans. |
The Syps Survival Summary
Did we survive the Yes Day? Yes. But only because we set a budget!
The teen is happy, which means weâre calling this family adventure a complete success.
Would we do a Yes Day again?
Ask us in 364 days.
