A couple of years back, I was on a train when my dad called me to say he had met someone whose daughter was going to the London School of Economics. He said it would be great if I could connect with her, maybe someday I could look at applying there too. I told him, honestly, are you kidding me? That was way too big a fish for us to catch. I didn’t even dream of going there back then. I didn’t say it out loud, but in my head I thought lol, my dad is a fool with such unrealistic dreams. Cut to today, here I am, his daughter, standing in front of the London School of Economics, graduated in International Development. There is so much magic in life. To my parents, whom I didn’t even tell I got into LSE at first, because I knew they wouldn’t be able to afford it. Both my brothers were already on student loans. I didn’t have that kind of money either. No matter what grants or help you get, it still felt like an expensive decision. All they said was, We know how much you want this. Money will come. You are going. My parents have flaws, and I do call them out from time to time. But what I can never ignore is how deeply they show up for their children. They will go to any extent for us. Sometimes it’s scary. But as children, as human beings, that’s what you want, parents who stand by you even if hell breaks loose. Thank you, Appa and Amma. Thank you for teaching me to dream, and to chase those dreams. Thank you for loving me the way you do. Last week, in a media interview, I said, “I got into the world’s best university only to feel like the biggest failure.” Getting in was not the hardest part after-all. Competing with some of the best minds in the world, and with yourself, your imposter syndrome, was. I’m glad I made it. Certainly not alone. LSE challenged me in ways I never imagined. Understanding the causes of things, as they call it, has become a way of life, learning to look at everything from multiple dimensions. It made me turn deeper into something I’ve been passionate about for years, women and power. [Continued in the comments below]
A couple of years back, I was on a train when my dad called me to say he had met someone whose daughter was going to the London School of Economics. He said it would be great if I could connect with her, maybe someday I could look at applying there too. I told him, honestly, are you kidding me? That was way too big a fish for us to catch. I didn’t even dream of going there back then. I didn’t say it out loud, but in my head I thought lol, my dad is a fool with such unrealistic dreams. Cut to today, here I am, his daughter, standing in front of the London School of Economics, graduated in International Development. There is so much magic in life. To my parents, whom I didn’t even tell I got into LSE at first, because I knew they wouldn’t be able to afford it. Both my brothers were already on student loans. I didn’t have that kind of money either. No matter what grants or help you get, it still felt like an expensive decision. All they said was, We know how much you want this. Money will come. You are going. My parents have flaws, and I do call them out from time to time. But what I can never ignore is how deeply they show up for their children. They will go to any extent for us. Sometimes it’s scary. But as children, as human beings, that’s what you want, parents who stand by you even if hell breaks loose. Thank you, Appa and Amma. Thank you for teaching me to dream, and to chase those dreams. Thank you for loving me the way you do. Last week, in a media interview, I said, “I got into the world’s best university only to feel like the biggest failure.” Getting in was not the hardest part after-all. Competing with some of the best minds in the world, and with yourself, your imposter syndrome, was. I’m glad I made it. Certainly not alone. LSE challenged me in ways I never imagined. Understanding the causes of things, as they call it, has become a way of life, learning to look at everything from multiple dimensions. It made me turn deeper into something I’ve been passionate about for years, women and power. [Continued in the comments below]
A couple of years back, I was on a train when my dad called me to say he had met someone whose daughter was going to the London School of Economics. He said it would be great if I could connect with her, maybe someday I could look at applying there too. I told him, honestly, are you kidding me? That was way too big a fish for us to catch. I didn’t even dream of going there back then. I didn’t say it out loud, but in my head I thought lol, my dad is a fool with such unrealistic dreams. Cut to today, here I am, his daughter, standing in front of the London School of Economics, graduated in International Development. There is so much magic in life. To my parents, whom I didn’t even tell I got into LSE at first, because I knew they wouldn’t be able to afford it. Both my brothers were already on student loans. I didn’t have that kind of money either. No matter what grants or help you get, it still felt like an expensive decision. All they said was, We know how much you want this. Money will come. You are going. My parents have flaws, and I do call them out from time to time. But what I can never ignore is how deeply they show up for their children. They will go to any extent for us. Sometimes it’s scary. But as children, as human beings, that’s what you want, parents who stand by you even if hell breaks loose. Thank you, Appa and Amma. Thank you for teaching me to dream, and to chase those dreams. Thank you for loving me the way you do. Last week, in a media interview, I said, “I got into the world’s best university only to feel like the biggest failure.” Getting in was not the hardest part after-all. Competing with some of the best minds in the world, and with yourself, your imposter syndrome, was. I’m glad I made it. Certainly not alone. LSE challenged me in ways I never imagined. Understanding the causes of things, as they call it, has become a way of life, learning to look at everything from multiple dimensions. It made me turn deeper into something I’ve been passionate about for years, women and power. [Continued in the comments below]
A couple of years back, I was on a train when my dad called me to say he had met someone whose daughter was going to the London School of Economics. He said it would be great if I could connect with her, maybe someday I could look at applying there too. I told him, honestly, are you kidding me? That was way too big a fish for us to catch. I didn’t even dream of going there back then. I didn’t say it out loud, but in my head I thought lol, my dad is a fool with such unrealistic dreams. Cut to today, here I am, his daughter, standing in front of the London School of Economics, graduated in International Development. There is so much magic in life. To my parents, whom I didn’t even tell I got into LSE at first, because I knew they wouldn’t be able to afford it. Both my brothers were already on student loans. I didn’t have that kind of money either. No matter what grants or help you get, it still felt like an expensive decision. All they said was, We know how much you want this. Money will come. You are going. My parents have flaws, and I do call them out from time to time. But what I can never ignore is how deeply they show up for their children. They will go to any extent for us. Sometimes it’s scary. But as children, as human beings, that’s what you want, parents who stand by you even if hell breaks loose. Thank you, Appa and Amma. Thank you for teaching me to dream, and to chase those dreams. Thank you for loving me the way you do. Last week, in a media interview, I said, “I got into the world’s best university only to feel like the biggest failure.” Getting in was not the hardest part after-all. Competing with some of the best minds in the world, and with yourself, your imposter syndrome, was. I’m glad I made it. Certainly not alone. LSE challenged me in ways I never imagined. Understanding the causes of things, as they call it, has become a way of life, learning to look at everything from multiple dimensions. It made me turn deeper into something I’ve been passionate about for years, women and power. [Continued in the comments below]
A couple of years back, I was on a train when my dad called me to say he had met someone whose daughter was going to the London School of Economics. He said it would be great if I could connect with her, maybe someday I could look at applying there too. I told him, honestly, are you kidding me? That was way too big a fish for us to catch. I didn’t even dream of going there back then. I didn’t say it out loud, but in my head I thought lol, my dad is a fool with such unrealistic dreams. Cut to today, here I am, his daughter, standing in front of the London School of Economics, graduated in International Development. There is so much magic in life. To my parents, whom I didn’t even tell I got into LSE at first, because I knew they wouldn’t be able to afford it. Both my brothers were already on student loans. I didn’t have that kind of money either. No matter what grants or help you get, it still felt like an expensive decision. All they said was, We know how much you want this. Money will come. You are going. My parents have flaws, and I do call them out from time to time. But what I can never ignore is how deeply they show up for their children. They will go to any extent for us. Sometimes it’s scary. But as children, as human beings, that’s what you want, parents who stand by you even if hell breaks loose. Thank you, Appa and Amma. Thank you for teaching me to dream, and to chase those dreams. Thank you for loving me the way you do. Last week, in a media interview, I said, “I got into the world’s best university only to feel like the biggest failure.” Getting in was not the hardest part after-all. Competing with some of the best minds in the world, and with yourself, your imposter syndrome, was. I’m glad I made it. Certainly not alone. LSE challenged me in ways I never imagined. Understanding the causes of things, as they call it, has become a way of life, learning to look at everything from multiple dimensions. It made me turn deeper into something I’ve been passionate about for years, women and power. [Continued in the comments below]
A couple of years back, I was on a train when my dad called me to say he had met someone whose daughter was going to the London School of Economics. He said it would be great if I could connect with her, maybe someday I could look at applying there too. I told him, honestly, are you kidding me? That was way too big a fish for us to catch. I didn’t even dream of going there back then. I didn’t say it out loud, but in my head I thought lol, my dad is a fool with such unrealistic dreams. Cut to today, here I am, his daughter, standing in front of the London School of Economics, graduated in International Development. There is so much magic in life. To my parents, whom I didn’t even tell I got into LSE at first, because I knew they wouldn’t be able to afford it. Both my brothers were already on student loans. I didn’t have that kind of money either. No matter what grants or help you get, it still felt like an expensive decision. All they said was, We know how much you want this. Money will come. You are going. My parents have flaws, and I do call them out from time to time. But what I can never ignore is how deeply they show up for their children. They will go to any extent for us. Sometimes it’s scary. But as children, as human beings, that’s what you want, parents who stand by you even if hell breaks loose. Thank you, Appa and Amma. Thank you for teaching me to dream, and to chase those dreams. Thank you for loving me the way you do. Last week, in a media interview, I said, “I got into the world’s best university only to feel like the biggest failure.” Getting in was not the hardest part after-all. Competing with some of the best minds in the world, and with yourself, your imposter syndrome, was. I’m glad I made it. Certainly not alone. LSE challenged me in ways I never imagined. Understanding the causes of things, as they call it, has become a way of life, learning to look at everything from multiple dimensions. It made me turn deeper into something I’ve been passionate about for years, women and power. [Continued in the comments below]
A couple of years back, I was on a train when my dad called me to say he had met someone whose daughter was going to the London School of Economics. He said it would be great if I could connect with her, maybe someday I could look at applying there too. I told him, honestly, are you kidding me? That was way too big a fish for us to catch. I didn’t even dream of going there back then. I didn’t say it out loud, but in my head I thought lol, my dad is a fool with such unrealistic dreams. Cut to today, here I am, his daughter, standing in front of the London School of Economics, graduated in International Development. There is so much magic in life. To my parents, whom I didn’t even tell I got into LSE at first, because I knew they wouldn’t be able to afford it. Both my brothers were already on student loans. I didn’t have that kind of money either. No matter what grants or help you get, it still felt like an expensive decision. All they said was, We know how much you want this. Money will come. You are going. My parents have flaws, and I do call them out from time to time. But what I can never ignore is how deeply they show up for their children. They will go to any extent for us. Sometimes it’s scary. But as children, as human beings, that’s what you want, parents who stand by you even if hell breaks loose. Thank you, Appa and Amma. Thank you for teaching me to dream, and to chase those dreams. Thank you for loving me the way you do. Last week, in a media interview, I said, “I got into the world’s best university only to feel like the biggest failure.” Getting in was not the hardest part after-all. Competing with some of the best minds in the world, and with yourself, your imposter syndrome, was. I’m glad I made it. Certainly not alone. LSE challenged me in ways I never imagined. Understanding the causes of things, as they call it, has become a way of life, learning to look at everything from multiple dimensions. It made me turn deeper into something I’ve been passionate about for years, women and power. [Continued in the comments below]
A couple of years back, I was on a train when my dad called me to say he had met someone whose daughter was going to the London School of Economics. He said it would be great if I could connect with her, maybe someday I could look at applying there too. I told him, honestly, are you kidding me? That was way too big a fish for us to catch. I didn’t even dream of going there back then. I didn’t say it out loud, but in my head I thought lol, my dad is a fool with such unrealistic dreams. Cut to today, here I am, his daughter, standing in front of the London School of Economics, graduated in International Development. There is so much magic in life. To my parents, whom I didn’t even tell I got into LSE at first, because I knew they wouldn’t be able to afford it. Both my brothers were already on student loans. I didn’t have that kind of money either. No matter what grants or help you get, it still felt like an expensive decision. All they said was, We know how much you want this. Money will come. You are going. My parents have flaws, and I do call them out from time to time. But what I can never ignore is how deeply they show up for their children. They will go to any extent for us. Sometimes it’s scary. But as children, as human beings, that’s what you want, parents who stand by you even if hell breaks loose. Thank you, Appa and Amma. Thank you for teaching me to dream, and to chase those dreams. Thank you for loving me the way you do. Last week, in a media interview, I said, “I got into the world’s best university only to feel like the biggest failure.” Getting in was not the hardest part after-all. Competing with some of the best minds in the world, and with yourself, your imposter syndrome, was. I’m glad I made it. Certainly not alone. LSE challenged me in ways I never imagined. Understanding the causes of things, as they call it, has become a way of life, learning to look at everything from multiple dimensions. It made me turn deeper into something I’ve been passionate about for years, women and power. [Continued in the comments below]
On 10 December 2025, I stood beneath a sky that reminded me just how small and miraculous life truly is 🌌. If only people could be kinder, warmer make this little time we have on this planet as beautiful as it can be. I know it sounds preachy, especially in a world growing more cynical by the day, but maybe the simplest truths are the ones we forget. I’m really just reminding myself. ✨ For years, I carried the dream of seeing the aurora, something I learned about at 17, something my heart held onto ever since. I was heartbroken when the hunt was cancelled on the first day. Then on the second, Louis messaged to say we could go… but it would mean a very long drive. Twelve hours in total on icy roads from Finland to the Norwegian border, frozen fingers, quiet hope and then, as if the universe whispered you’ve earned this, the sky opened. The northern lights chose us. Thank you, @louischarlesbuyck , for making this journey possible.❤️ These are my dreams… and many, many dreams to go. I hope I can dream forever, chase them forever. Reminds me of something my dad used to tell us when we were little: “When your dreams die, you die.” I am sure Appa felt the proudest when I chose to travel to another corner of the world, all ALONE, in the middle of nowhere, just to witness something I had wished for all my life. Thank you, universe, for your quiet magic. And thank you, life, for letting me be here to witness something so impossibly beautiful. For reminding Life is a gift; to be alive, conscious, feeling is unbelievably rare. Can only think of this line to summarise it all.. “How rare and beautiful it is to even exist.” Travel partner: @safari_travels
On 10 December 2025, I stood beneath a sky that reminded me just how small and miraculous life truly is 🌌. If only people could be kinder, warmer make this little time we have on this planet as beautiful as it can be. I know it sounds preachy, especially in a world growing more cynical by the day, but maybe the simplest truths are the ones we forget. I’m really just reminding myself. ✨ For years, I carried the dream of seeing the aurora, something I learned about at 17, something my heart held onto ever since. I was heartbroken when the hunt was cancelled on the first day. Then on the second, Louis messaged to say we could go… but it would mean a very long drive. Twelve hours in total on icy roads from Finland to the Norwegian border, frozen fingers, quiet hope and then, as if the universe whispered you’ve earned this, the sky opened. The northern lights chose us. Thank you, @louischarlesbuyck , for making this journey possible.❤️ These are my dreams… and many, many dreams to go. I hope I can dream forever, chase them forever. Reminds me of something my dad used to tell us when we were little: “When your dreams die, you die.” I am sure Appa felt the proudest when I chose to travel to another corner of the world, all ALONE, in the middle of nowhere, just to witness something I had wished for all my life. Thank you, universe, for your quiet magic. And thank you, life, for letting me be here to witness something so impossibly beautiful. For reminding Life is a gift; to be alive, conscious, feeling is unbelievably rare. Can only think of this line to summarise it all.. “How rare and beautiful it is to even exist.” Travel partner: @safari_travels
On 10 December 2025, I stood beneath a sky that reminded me just how small and miraculous life truly is 🌌. If only people could be kinder, warmer make this little time we have on this planet as beautiful as it can be. I know it sounds preachy, especially in a world growing more cynical by the day, but maybe the simplest truths are the ones we forget. I’m really just reminding myself. ✨ For years, I carried the dream of seeing the aurora, something I learned about at 17, something my heart held onto ever since. I was heartbroken when the hunt was cancelled on the first day. Then on the second, Louis messaged to say we could go… but it would mean a very long drive. Twelve hours in total on icy roads from Finland to the Norwegian border, frozen fingers, quiet hope and then, as if the universe whispered you’ve earned this, the sky opened. The northern lights chose us. Thank you, @louischarlesbuyck , for making this journey possible.❤️ These are my dreams… and many, many dreams to go. I hope I can dream forever, chase them forever. Reminds me of something my dad used to tell us when we were little: “When your dreams die, you die.” I am sure Appa felt the proudest when I chose to travel to another corner of the world, all ALONE, in the middle of nowhere, just to witness something I had wished for all my life. Thank you, universe, for your quiet magic. And thank you, life, for letting me be here to witness something so impossibly beautiful. For reminding Life is a gift; to be alive, conscious, feeling is unbelievably rare. Can only think of this line to summarise it all.. “How rare and beautiful it is to even exist.” Travel partner: @safari_travels
5 countries in 2025 was on my bucket list and ticking it off in Rovaniemi, Finland felt magical ❄️✨ Trusted @safari_travels completely this time, and wow… They made me try the reindeer ride and the hot tub sauna, and honestly that was the best experience of the entire trip apart from Northern Lights obviously, hehe. I never imagined that sitting in a hot tub in the middle of a forest, completely covered in snow, could feel so grounding and healing. Everything was silent, calm, and unreal like time just slowed down for a moment. It genuinely felt like my soul needed that exact experience. 100/100 would recommend it to anyone without a second thought. Thank you for making everything so seamless, as always 🤍 So dreamy that I couldn’t stop thinking about coming back someday with my future kids to visit the Santa Claus Village, again🎅 Missed my husband and kids that I don’t have yet 😂
5 countries in 2025 was on my bucket list and ticking it off in Rovaniemi, Finland felt magical ❄️✨ Trusted @safari_travels completely this time, and wow… They made me try the reindeer ride and the hot tub sauna, and honestly that was the best experience of the entire trip apart from Northern Lights obviously, hehe. I never imagined that sitting in a hot tub in the middle of a forest, completely covered in snow, could feel so grounding and healing. Everything was silent, calm, and unreal like time just slowed down for a moment. It genuinely felt like my soul needed that exact experience. 100/100 would recommend it to anyone without a second thought. Thank you for making everything so seamless, as always 🤍 So dreamy that I couldn’t stop thinking about coming back someday with my future kids to visit the Santa Claus Village, again🎅 Missed my husband and kids that I don’t have yet 😂
5 countries in 2025 was on my bucket list and ticking it off in Rovaniemi, Finland felt magical ❄️✨ Trusted @safari_travels completely this time, and wow… They made me try the reindeer ride and the hot tub sauna, and honestly that was the best experience of the entire trip apart from Northern Lights obviously, hehe. I never imagined that sitting in a hot tub in the middle of a forest, completely covered in snow, could feel so grounding and healing. Everything was silent, calm, and unreal like time just slowed down for a moment. It genuinely felt like my soul needed that exact experience. 100/100 would recommend it to anyone without a second thought. Thank you for making everything so seamless, as always 🤍 So dreamy that I couldn’t stop thinking about coming back someday with my future kids to visit the Santa Claus Village, again🎅 Missed my husband and kids that I don’t have yet 😂
5 countries in 2025 was on my bucket list and ticking it off in Rovaniemi, Finland felt magical ❄️✨ Trusted @safari_travels completely this time, and wow… They made me try the reindeer ride and the hot tub sauna, and honestly that was the best experience of the entire trip apart from Northern Lights obviously, hehe. I never imagined that sitting in a hot tub in the middle of a forest, completely covered in snow, could feel so grounding and healing. Everything was silent, calm, and unreal like time just slowed down for a moment. It genuinely felt like my soul needed that exact experience. 100/100 would recommend it to anyone without a second thought. Thank you for making everything so seamless, as always 🤍 So dreamy that I couldn’t stop thinking about coming back someday with my future kids to visit the Santa Claus Village, again🎅 Missed my husband and kids that I don’t have yet 😂
5 countries in 2025 was on my bucket list and ticking it off in Rovaniemi, Finland felt magical ❄️✨ Trusted @safari_travels completely this time, and wow… They made me try the reindeer ride and the hot tub sauna, and honestly that was the best experience of the entire trip apart from Northern Lights obviously, hehe. I never imagined that sitting in a hot tub in the middle of a forest, completely covered in snow, could feel so grounding and healing. Everything was silent, calm, and unreal like time just slowed down for a moment. It genuinely felt like my soul needed that exact experience. 100/100 would recommend it to anyone without a second thought. Thank you for making everything so seamless, as always 🤍 So dreamy that I couldn’t stop thinking about coming back someday with my future kids to visit the Santa Claus Village, again🎅 Missed my husband and kids that I don’t have yet 😂
5 countries in 2025 was on my bucket list and ticking it off in Rovaniemi, Finland felt magical ❄️✨ Trusted @safari_travels completely this time, and wow… They made me try the reindeer ride and the hot tub sauna, and honestly that was the best experience of the entire trip apart from Northern Lights obviously, hehe. I never imagined that sitting in a hot tub in the middle of a forest, completely covered in snow, could feel so grounding and healing. Everything was silent, calm, and unreal like time just slowed down for a moment. It genuinely felt like my soul needed that exact experience. 100/100 would recommend it to anyone without a second thought. Thank you for making everything so seamless, as always 🤍 So dreamy that I couldn’t stop thinking about coming back someday with my future kids to visit the Santa Claus Village, again🎅 Missed my husband and kids that I don’t have yet 😂
5 countries in 2025 was on my bucket list and ticking it off in Rovaniemi, Finland felt magical ❄️✨ Trusted @safari_travels completely this time, and wow… They made me try the reindeer ride and the hot tub sauna, and honestly that was the best experience of the entire trip apart from Northern Lights obviously, hehe. I never imagined that sitting in a hot tub in the middle of a forest, completely covered in snow, could feel so grounding and healing. Everything was silent, calm, and unreal like time just slowed down for a moment. It genuinely felt like my soul needed that exact experience. 100/100 would recommend it to anyone without a second thought. Thank you for making everything so seamless, as always 🤍 So dreamy that I couldn’t stop thinking about coming back someday with my future kids to visit the Santa Claus Village, again🎅 Missed my husband and kids that I don’t have yet 😂
5 countries in 2025 was on my bucket list and ticking it off in Rovaniemi, Finland felt magical ❄️✨ Trusted @safari_travels completely this time, and wow… They made me try the reindeer ride and the hot tub sauna, and honestly that was the best experience of the entire trip apart from Northern Lights obviously, hehe. I never imagined that sitting in a hot tub in the middle of a forest, completely covered in snow, could feel so grounding and healing. Everything was silent, calm, and unreal like time just slowed down for a moment. It genuinely felt like my soul needed that exact experience. 100/100 would recommend it to anyone without a second thought. Thank you for making everything so seamless, as always 🤍 So dreamy that I couldn’t stop thinking about coming back someday with my future kids to visit the Santa Claus Village, again🎅 Missed my husband and kids that I don’t have yet 😂
5 countries in 2025 was on my bucket list and ticking it off in Rovaniemi, Finland felt magical ❄️✨ Trusted @safari_travels completely this time, and wow… They made me try the reindeer ride and the hot tub sauna, and honestly that was the best experience of the entire trip apart from Northern Lights obviously, hehe. I never imagined that sitting in a hot tub in the middle of a forest, completely covered in snow, could feel so grounding and healing. Everything was silent, calm, and unreal like time just slowed down for a moment. It genuinely felt like my soul needed that exact experience. 100/100 would recommend it to anyone without a second thought. Thank you for making everything so seamless, as always 🤍 So dreamy that I couldn’t stop thinking about coming back someday with my future kids to visit the Santa Claus Village, again🎅 Missed my husband and kids that I don’t have yet 😂
5 countries in 2025 was on my bucket list and ticking it off in Rovaniemi, Finland felt magical ❄️✨ Trusted @safari_travels completely this time, and wow… They made me try the reindeer ride and the hot tub sauna, and honestly that was the best experience of the entire trip apart from Northern Lights obviously, hehe. I never imagined that sitting in a hot tub in the middle of a forest, completely covered in snow, could feel so grounding and healing. Everything was silent, calm, and unreal like time just slowed down for a moment. It genuinely felt like my soul needed that exact experience. 100/100 would recommend it to anyone without a second thought. Thank you for making everything so seamless, as always 🤍 So dreamy that I couldn’t stop thinking about coming back someday with my future kids to visit the Santa Claus Village, again🎅 Missed my husband and kids that I don’t have yet 😂
5 countries in 2025 was on my bucket list and ticking it off in Rovaniemi, Finland felt magical ❄️✨ Trusted @safari_travels completely this time, and wow… They made me try the reindeer ride and the hot tub sauna, and honestly that was the best experience of the entire trip apart from Northern Lights obviously, hehe. I never imagined that sitting in a hot tub in the middle of a forest, completely covered in snow, could feel so grounding and healing. Everything was silent, calm, and unreal like time just slowed down for a moment. It genuinely felt like my soul needed that exact experience. 100/100 would recommend it to anyone without a second thought. Thank you for making everything so seamless, as always 🤍 So dreamy that I couldn’t stop thinking about coming back someday with my future kids to visit the Santa Claus Village, again🎅 Missed my husband and kids that I don’t have yet 😂
5 countries in 2025 was on my bucket list and ticking it off in Rovaniemi, Finland felt magical ❄️✨ Trusted @safari_travels completely this time, and wow… They made me try the reindeer ride and the hot tub sauna, and honestly that was the best experience of the entire trip apart from Northern Lights obviously, hehe. I never imagined that sitting in a hot tub in the middle of a forest, completely covered in snow, could feel so grounding and healing. Everything was silent, calm, and unreal like time just slowed down for a moment. It genuinely felt like my soul needed that exact experience. 100/100 would recommend it to anyone without a second thought. Thank you for making everything so seamless, as always 🤍 So dreamy that I couldn’t stop thinking about coming back someday with my future kids to visit the Santa Claus Village, again🎅 Missed my husband and kids that I don’t have yet 😂
5 countries in 2025 was on my bucket list and ticking it off in Rovaniemi, Finland felt magical ❄️✨ Trusted @safari_travels completely this time, and wow… They made me try the reindeer ride and the hot tub sauna, and honestly that was the best experience of the entire trip apart from Northern Lights obviously, hehe. I never imagined that sitting in a hot tub in the middle of a forest, completely covered in snow, could feel so grounding and healing. Everything was silent, calm, and unreal like time just slowed down for a moment. It genuinely felt like my soul needed that exact experience. 100/100 would recommend it to anyone without a second thought. Thank you for making everything so seamless, as always 🤍 So dreamy that I couldn’t stop thinking about coming back someday with my future kids to visit the Santa Claus Village, again🎅 Missed my husband and kids that I don’t have yet 😂