She kicks off her first vlog of the year on January 28, easing into the new season of life in Uluwatu, Bali. Instead of rushing from place to place, she stays put for a few weeks, build routines, and let simple days feel full. Between home-cooked meals, slow beach afternoons, smoothie runs, and a move to a recovery-focused stay (hello, sauna and ice bath), she ends up with the kind of Bali travel week that feels both restful and real.
Watch the full vlog below!
Starting the Year in Uluwatu: A Chill Routine That Sticks
After the holidays in Mauritius, she gives herself a long break, then come back to Bali without forcing a big dramatic reset. She’s been in Uluwatu for three weeks, staying in the same spot the whole time, and that choice changes everything. Instead of living out of a bag, she gets to focus on everyday life, work, and routines, with less noise in her head.
Even the intro feels playful, with music, silly moments, and that quick “I am the crab” energy before the week settles into something softer. She’s not trying to pack her days. She’s trying to live them.
By late afternoon, she realizes it’s already 5:00 p.m. because she’s been working at home all day. That’s the tone of this week. Hours pass, not in chaos, but in a steady rhythm. When she travels like this, she stops measuring the day by how much she saw, and start measuring it by how she felt while she was there.
She also builds her days around small anchors. Work first, then something outside, then a calm evening that doesn’t require much planning. It’s not flashy, but it’s the kind of structure that makes a place feel like home.
Home Office Setup and End-of-Day Plans
She spends the day working from her own little home office setup, and she plans to show it later. By evening, she heads out hoping for a sunset, although the sky looks gloomy and she’s not sure the sun will show.
Still, she goes anyway. she meets friends, head toward the beach, aim for whatever light she can get, then move on to dinner. After that, she brings the energy back down with a chill self-care night at home.
Loving Home Cooking Over Cafes
On another morning, her plan is simple: walk to the local market because she’s run out of produce. She has been loving cooking at home lately, which surprises her because Bali makes it so easy to eat out. Cafes are everywhere, and ordering on Grab is convenient.
Yet after restaurants and cafes three times a day, the appeal wears off. She starts craving meals that feel quiet.
> When she’s sensitive and she gets overstimulated easily, eating at home can feel like turning the volume down on the whole day.
Cooking becomes less about being “productive” and more about giving herself peace. She gets to eat without loud music, without constant movement around her, and without feeling like she needs to be “on” in public. It’s also one of the quickest ways to make travel feel steady, even when she’s far from home.
Small Wins That Make Travel Feel Grounded
This week isn’t only about places, it’s also about the small personal shifts that make she feels more like herself. Some changes are quiet, like what she eats and how she moves through the day. Others surprise her, like realizing how many people are actually watching and connecting with what she shares.
There’s a specific kind of happiness that shows up when she’s traveling and she realizes her life is touching other lives. It doesn’t feel loud or performative. It feels warm, like a moment that catches you off guard in the best way.
At the same time, she’s also holding herself to a promise she has wanted to keep for years. Not in a strict way, but in a “finally, I’m ready” way.
Meeting Viewers Inspired by Her Videos
While she’s in Bali, she meets so many viewers who come up to her and tell her that they watch her videos. One girl even says she came to Uluwatu because her videos inspired her. She expected to share clips of her day. She didn’t expect her choices to influence someone else’s trip.
That realization lands slowly. It makes her happy, and it makes the whole thing feel more real. She’s not just uploading into a void. She’s talking to people who are actually out there, taking notes, dreaming, booking flights, and showing up in the same places she films.
Ditching Fake Eyelashes and Getting Used to Her Natural Look
Since Mauritius, she sticks to a resolution she’s wanted for years: she finally stops wearing fake eyelashes.
She tried in November, but she went back because she felt weird and uncomfortable without them. That makes sense, especially since she has worn them since she was 15. Habits like that become part of how she sees herself.
This time, it feels different. Not wearing them becomes easier. She starts to like how she looks, and she gets used to her own face again. It’s a small change, but it’s also the kind that makes she feels lighter day to day, especially when she’s traveling and she wants her routines to be simple.
Beach Time, Real-Life Bali, and Easy Snack Runs
At one point, the sun finally comes out, and the whole day shifts. When the light hits, she wants to go down to the beach, get a little tan, and take a dip in the ocean. Those quick beach windows matter in Bali because the weather can change fast, and a gloomy sky can turn bright without warning.
She also shows what the beach looks like right now, not filtered, not romanticized. She mentions the state of Bingin Beach, and she doesn’t pretend it’s perfect. Bali is beautiful, but it’s also a real place with real issues, and some days the contrast is obvious.
Back at home, she leans into what she clearly likes most this week: quiet, familiar rituals. A cold shower. A work block. A small snack run. Then another calm evening that doesn’t ask too much from her.
Market Run and a Beach Dip
She grabs her bag and head to the local market to restock produce. The walk itself feels like part of the routine, not just a chore. Later, when the sun appears, she heads down to the beach for a tan and a swim.
Even if she doesn’t spell out every detail, the intention is clear. She’s choosing simple plans that match her energy. She’s also letting herself sees Bali as it is, not only as a highlight reel.
Smoothie Cravings and a Chill Workday Reset
After some time, she’s back home, freshly showered, and ready to work from her place again. Later in the afternoon (around 3:00 p.m.), she decides she wants a snack, so she walks next door to the cafe for a smoothie.
It’s the kind of routine that makes travel feel easy. You don’t need a big plan. You just need a place you like, a short walk, and something small to look forward to. Even the people at the cafe recognize her. Someone jokes that she comes every day for the smoothie, and she laughs because it’s not totally wrong.
Haircut Sunday and a Therapeutic Jewelry Session
On Sunday morning, she shows her haircut. It’s so short. She asked the stylist to cut what looked dry, and she finds out that apparently half her hair was dead. It’s a shock, but it also feels like a clean start.
She sits with a cup of tea, finish her morning routine, and then do something that feels slow and calming: she makes jewelry. She describes it as therapeutic, especially while watching YouTube or listening to music. It’s hands-on, repetitive, and gentle, which makes it the perfect match for a quiet morning when she doesn’t want to rush into the day.
Moving Day in Uluwatu: A New Place With Sauna and Ice Baths
Then the week pivots. It’s moving day, and she leaves the place she’s stayed in for over a month. The new spot is only 10 minutes away, but the vibe is different, and she’s genuinely excited about one thing in particular: it has its own sauna and ice bath area.
If she has followed along for a while, she already knows she loves recovery routines. So this move isn’t just about a new room. It’s about setting herself up to feel better day to day.
Packing takes longer than she expects because it’s been over a month since she last packed a suitcase. Still, she gets it done, and she’s ready to go.
Packing Up After a Month (and the Kitten Detour)
She underestimates how long packing will take, then she remembers why she hates doing it. Clothes, toiletries, the little items she didn’t realize she’d spread around the room, it all adds up.
Along the way, she gets distracted by kittens. One ends up on her lap, and she worries they might be abandoned. That moment shifts the mood for a second, because it’s hard to ignore animals that might need help, even when she’s mid-move.
By 8:00 a.m., she’s ready to switch into evening mode instead of logistics mode. She takes off her makeup and head to the sauna.
Sauna Time: Visualizing a Reset She Can Feel
She shows how convenient the new place is. She leaves her room and the recovery area is basically right there, close enough that it feels effortless to use. Once she’s in the sauna, she mentions she usually doesn’t bring her phone, she only records briefly.
The sauna feels relaxing, and she doesn’t know why she hasn’t done it more often in Bali. She also describes what she visualizes while she sits in the heat.
> She imagines sweating out toxins, then she pictures releasing negativity and limiting self-beliefs, too.
It’s not “nice” in the last minutes when it gets intense. Still, she loves the feeling after. She notices anxiety relief once she steps out, and she sleeps so much better.
A Cozy Night In With Food, a Face Mask, and a Movie
After the sauna, she grabs food and feel genuinely excited to eat it. She also has a face mask, but she decides to wait until after dinner.
The plan is simple: a cozy movie night in. She tries to use the TV, but there’s an annoying background noise, so she changes plans and eat in bed instead. She takes her jewelry off, dry her hair, get comfortable, and let the night be easy.
Morning Walks, Hotel Breakfast, and Getting Back on Track
The next morning starts with movement. She goes on a long walk and hit around 5,000 steps, which feels like a win because she usually aims for 10,000. Bali doesn’t always make that easy, but a morning walk helps, especially when she wants the day to feel clear before work takes over.
She adds a few small self-care touches too, like eye patches. Then she heads to breakfast at the hotel.
The staff stands out to her. She calls them the sweetest, and she says that she’s going to miss Bali so much when she leaves. Those little interactions become part of what she remember, not just the views.
5K Steps Before Breakfast (and Her Order)
After her walk, she orders a full breakfast. She gets a breakfast plate, plus an oatmeal pancake, and she adds a cappuccino with coconut milk. Someone comments that it’s a lot of food, and the moment feels light and friendly.
It’s a good snapshot of what you’re building this week: mornings that start gently, meals that feel nourishing, and routines that don’t depend on constant stimulation.
Pool Time, Sunburn, and Ending the Week With Gratitude
Later, she spends time by the pool and keep using the sauna and ice bath. She also notices she’s gotten a bit sunburned, so she decides it’s best to stay indoors.
By the end of the vlog, she wants to catch up on work because she has fallen a little out of routine. She also shares a quick, practical takeaway about where she’s staying. It’s an Uluwatu place with rooms, a pool area, a cafe, and on-site recovery (sauna and ice bath). The only thing missing is a gym. If she wants a relaxing getaway where most things are in one spot, it’s a convenient setup.
She also teases what’s next: an exciting villa collaboration, plus more detail on how she lands collaborations since people ask her about it often.
Wrapping Up Her Bali Travel Week (and What She Does Next)
She ends the week feeling grateful, especially because she has met so many viewers in Bali and it still feels surreal. That experience pushes her to share encouragement with other creators she loves, because she sees how much a kind word can matter. Most importantly, she leaves this week with routines that actually fit her nervous system, not just her itinerary.













Leave a Reply
View Comments