Telephone: +4915172664064
What a Ride!
“Buy the ticket, take the ride.” – Hunter S. Thompson
This isn’t a Che Guevara-style diary filled only with motorcycle adventures—though I do love to ride. Whether it’s motorbikes, horses, or anything that allows me to feel free, I’ve spent as much time in the saddle as I have chasing new horizons. But this is about every kind of ride—planes, trains, boats, waves, and, most of all, the ride of my life.
Like Guevara’s journey, what started as a series of travel adventures became something much more—a personal transformation, a journey of self-discovery, and a breaking away from old patterns. Travel has tested me, healed me, and ultimately shaped the way I see the world and myself.
This is my uncut version of travel—how I broke free from limitations, overcame addiction, and learned solitude without loneliness. It taught me resilience, self-acceptance, and the power of transformation—far beyond five-star resorts and perfect landscapes.
The most meaningful journey is the one within.
I didn’t heal in therapy rooms or yoga studios. I healed in cabins above the Arctic Circle, hauling water through snow and facing myself in places no one else could reach. This is where my transformational travel story begins.
From Addiction to Alignment: Deluxe penthouse suite. Sunset drinks on the open sea. All-inclusive delights. What looked like pure indulgence became something deeper: a moment of radical clarity. Surrounded by everything that once triggered me—I felt whole. Present. Free. This isn’t just about a cruise from Barcelona to Casablanca. It’s about the journey within.
I’ve long believed in the power of travel to shift your perspective. But what happened to me in Arizona was more than a shift—it was a very uncomfortable lesson in setting boundaries. I went to the states for work, for a press trip that sounded like a dream on paper: lovely resorts, mind-blowing nature activities, Native culture, spa experiences. But I had to do what no itinerary could prepare me for: I had to rethink and up-level my boundaries.
And man, was that uncomfortable.