About Me

I’ve spent over a decade working in luxury hospitality — in guest experience, operations, and wellbeing — in environments where expectations are high, resources are limited, and people are constantly “on.”

Over the years, I’ve noticed something consistent:
most hoteliers and leaders don’t struggle because they lack capability — they struggle because they lack time, space, and support to think, feel, and lead sustainably.

That’s where my work comes from.

I come from Indonesia, from a middle-income family where education was deeply valued. Thanks to a full scholarship, I was able to pursue my undergraduate studies at an international university in Bali. My late father came from a background of educators and coaches, and he believed — fiercely — that education was not a luxury, but a responsibility. That belief shaped how I move through the world.

Today, alongside my operational role managing multiple departments and over 100 employees at a luxury resort in the Maldives, I continue to explore what it truly means to live and lead well — not perfectly, but honestly.

My curiosity has taken me through practices like yoga, mindfulness, somatic work, and other personal development modalities — not to collect certifications, but to understand what actually helps people stay grounded while carrying responsibility.

WholisticallyMe was born from this question.

The name comes from Whole + Holistic + Me — a reminder that growth doesn’t need to be fragmented. Career, wellbeing, relationships, purpose — they’re not separate lanes. They influence each other, whether we acknowledge it or not.

This space is for leaders, operators, and humans who are doing their best — often quietly — and want to live with more clarity, calm, and authenticity without having to disappear from real life to do so.

In 2026, I stopped waiting to be “fully ready” before sharing. I’m allowing myself to be in my experimentation era — learning in public, refining my methodology, and building this platform step by step. Not because I have all the answers, but because I know how valuable it is to hear from someone who is walking the path, not preaching from the finish line.

Here, I share what has worked for me so far:

  • grounded personal development

  • wellbeing practices that fit into real lives

  • reflections on leadership, identity, and growth

  • and small, honest shifts toward living a more authentic life

No perfection.
No pressure.
Just progress — one conscious step at a time.

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