So. I’m in the middle of my final exams, right?
It took me 2 years longer than everyone else to get this far bc my health is shit and nobody could figure out what was wrong for a long time, but that is not a story for the internet, mostly because it would devolve into an angry rant about nobody believing a woman working and studying in healthcare that she could tell the difference between being sick and being stressed. I got my diagnoses last summer. I suck at Latin grammar, but that plural is, in fact, intentional. (Side note: My old Latin teacher would laugh his butt off if he ever found out that my edgy “Ugh, nobody needs Latin, it’s a dead language!”-rebellion during his classes would lead to me getting royally dunked on by centuries-dead anatomists.)
So. The pressure is real, right?
Guess which obsession is back. Now I’ll present this to you in form of an exam question because reasons. AHEM:
If obsessed with ancient Greek sims, and having downloaded several pieces of CC to match, which of the following courses of action make sense to you, given that it is the most stressful time of your life? (Only one answer is correct)
[ ] I’ll maybe start setting up a travel world for my main hood in my sparse free time. NRAAS Traveler is a thing, after all.
[ ] I’ll do nothing. It’s just sims, there’s more important things to worry about, I mean, will I ever really play that?
[ ] ... f*** it, I’ll just do my entire Civilization-Challenge in a Greek setting and have them and the Nordics visit each other once the Proto-Hellenic society gets to roughly the same time period, which took me only 2-3 real life years for the Nordics. Time to create some Stone-Age Greeks.
Guys, I did the third one. I can’t even write anything, I’m too tired, I just take pictures and play with Stone-Age Greek Simsies. Why am I like this? Anyway, that was my sign that I’m still alive for today, have a good day, love you!
EDIT: The lovely @danjaley informed me that diagnosis is Greek, not Latin. If anyone needed irrevocable proof that I really suck at Latin: I evidently don’t even know the difference. Those centuries-dead anatomists just had a good laugh at my expense, I’m sure :D