At the heart of each journey are Pressia and Maider — the discreet yet defining ingredient that transforms travel into something profoundly personal.
Bound by nearly two decades of friendship and a shared international trajectory at the highest level of international leadership and advisory, they bring together complementary worlds with rare precision, intuition, and sensitivity.
Together, they act as thoughtful curators and trusted guides, designing singular experiences across Asia for individuals who seek meaning, alignment, and a more conscious way of engaging with the world, life, and the subtle energy that connects both.

Pressia’s journey
My journey began in 2010, in the Guatemalan Highlands, when a Mayan Tz’utujil friend told me about a man who could call upon the ancestors of water and bring the rain to their community.
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Curiosity led me to seek him out, and along the way, others appeared with very specific purposes. Each one offered me a lesson, a new perspective, and the strength I needed through different chapters of my life.
Later, Nepal called me. There, I discovered places with an indescribable energy — landscapes that inspire stillness, depth, and a profound sense of connection. Places that remind you how meaningful it is simply to be alive.
I have traveled to more than sixty countries. While much of it began through my professional life, there was always a deeper search behind it: finding answers to questions I couldn’t yet explain, making sense of difficult experiences, and ultimately finding myself.
Over the years, meaningful encounters and sacred places continued to appear on my path. I learned that even in moments of uncertainty, life has a way of guiding you toward the right people and the right direction.
Now, in this new chapter, I look forward to sharing that experiences with those embarking on their own journey of transformation.
You are exactly where you are meant to be.
Pressia
Maider’s journey
My journey began in 2006, just days before I was due to fly home after spending several months working in Kingston, Jamaica. Out of nowhere, the phone rang with an offer for a job in Guatemala.
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I actually had to pull out a map to see where the country was — not knowing that I was about to begin a completely new chapter of my life.
I spent four years working alongside Mayan communities, and the experience transformed the way I saw both the world and myself. Through them, I discovered new ways of understanding mathematics, astronomy, calendars, and even time itself. It felt as though I had been handed an instruction manual for life — one that revealed a deep harmony underlying everything. Where Western eyes often saw chaos or emptiness, I began to recognize balance, precision, and meaning.
That journey continued years later when I arrived in Kathmandu and first stepped into Boudhanath. I felt an immediate and unexplainable sense of joy and familiarity, as though I had somehow returned to a place I already knew. During the months I worked in Nepal, that feeling only grew stronger, reaching its height while trekking for days through the valleys of Annapurna.
Today, I’m writing these words from my home on a small island in the middle of the Atlantic — a place I reached after many more journeys, where nature and the people I met along the way slowly became part of who I am.
It feels like a new journey is now beginning — one where Pressia and I will accompany others, just as so many people once accompanied us along our own path. And perhaps, if our paths are meant to cross, we may have the opportunity to share part of that journey together.
Maider
