Why a 15-year traveler stopped, moved to Bangkok, and started over.
I arrived in Fiji on a postcard afternoon. Blue sky. Sun on the water. The hotel upgraded me to a room with a balcony overlooking a green garden and a pool. The staff brought me a welcome drink and listed the islands I should see.
They were trying to give me the trip I had been chasing my entire adult life.
I stood on the balcony, looked at the water, and felt nothing.
I went back to my room. I sat on the bed. I opened my laptop and booked the next flight back to Bangkok.
I had been in Fiji for less than four hours.
I didn’t know it at the time, but Fiji wasn’t the moment I stopped. It was the first warning that I should. It took me another eighteen months to actually listen.
The fifteen years before that afternoon
I left Germany at 20 to study international tourism management in the Netherlands. By the next summer, on a ten-week trip across Asia, I had decided what my life would look like. I founded Universal Traveller that year. This was before Instagram, before TikTok, before “influencer” was a job title.
For most of the next fifteen years, I got exactly what I built it for. By the early 2020s, the blog was eighty percent passive. I’d wake up in Tulum without an alarm. A friend would text. We’d close our laptops and drive to a cenote and not open them again for two weeks. That was the life. That was exactly the life.
I am proud of those years. I would not change them.
I am also telling you what they cost, because for a long time I didn’t tell anyone. Fifteen years of new hotels every few days. Hundreds of friendships that lasted a few days each. Missed family events. Relationships that couldn’t survive different time zones. Four or five in the morning was a normal time to come home.
I rarely saw doctors. When you’re young, your body compensates. I told myself I was fine because I was still functioning.
March 2024
I woke up one morning in Australia and my business was making less than a dollar a day.
Google had pushed an update. My traffic graph fell off a cliff and didn’t recover. Fourteen years of work.
I wasn’t worried at first. I’d lived through Google updates before. They always came back.
What I didn’t understand for a while, and what would take much longer to admit, was that the money wasn’t the part that was breaking. The story was.
For fifteen years, I’d been the guy who left Germany at 20 and figured out how to make the world pay him to keep moving. That sentence had explained me to everyone, including me. When Google deleted the traffic, the sentence stopped working. And I had nothing else.
So I did what I knew how to do. I kept moving.
The Australia trip was already planned. Whitsundays. My first base jump in Cairns. Sydney.
Then a month in a camper van across New Zealand, another base jump, a helicopter landing on a glacier. By any measure, these were once-in-a-lifetime days. I had been dreaming of a trip like that since I was twenty.
I was happy when the thirty days were over.
I flew on to the Pacific. With every stop, I went out less. I spent more time in the hotel room. Scrolling. Watching the day pass.
Then I landed in Fiji.
What I did instead of stopping
I flew back to Bangkok in June. Of every place I had been in fifteen years, Bangkok was the one that felt like home. When I landed, I exhaled.
If this were a tidier story, that’s where the rebuild would have started.
I went home to Germany for the summer to see my family. I was with an old friend, talking the way you talk to someone who has known you a long time.
At some point, he stopped me. He said the way I was talking about traveling had changed. The enthusiasm wasn’t there. He said I sounded down and worried in a way he hadn’t heard from me before.
I brushed it off. I told him things would turn around. I changed the subject.
It took me almost a year to understand he had heard something I couldn’t yet hear in myself.
In late November, I flew back to Bangkok and got on a bicycle.
I rode 8,000 kilometers over the next three months. Bangkok to Chiang Mai. The Mae Hong Son Loop. North to Chiang Rai. Into Laos through Luang Prabang and Vientiane. Across the border into Vietnam.
Every day on the bike. Every night, a new hotel. Every evening, on my laptop trying to recover the business that had been broken since March.
I had invented something called Luxury Bikepacking. I told myself another long trip would be the answer. I thought I could ride my way back to the version of me who had started traveling at 20.
By the time I crossed into Vietnam, my body was breaking. I’d planned to stop in Da Nang but couldn’t find long-term accommodation, so I stopped in Nha Trang instead. I didn’t care which city it was anymore. Just somewhere with a hotel that would have me for a few months.
I stayed in that hotel for three months. I barely left. I worked fourteen hours a day trying to force the business back. It didn’t come back.
When I finally left Nha Trang, I got back on the bike for another month and rode through Southern Thailand to Bangkok.
The actual stop
It happened the following November.
I had spent another summer in Germany. By the end of it, I knew I couldn’t go back to hotel rooms. I didn’t have the energy for them anymore. I rented an apartment in Bangkok from Germany before I flew. The first apartment I had had in my own name in fifteen years.
I didn’t get on another plane after that. I didn’t get on another bike. I just stayed.
I told my old friend over coffee. The one who, a year earlier, had said the way I talked about traveling had changed. I think he already knew.
I joined a run club. I started meeting people in Bangkok who were trying to live healthier lives. In December, someone mentioned IV drips. I was curious. I booked one at a longevity clinic called Healthi Life.
I took a motorbike taxi through the heat. The clinic is an old, beautiful Thai house in Ekkamai. They call it a longevity house. The energy is closer to someone’s living room than a medical facility.
I met Dr. Petch, one of the founders. Before she did anything else, she sat down and asked me about my life. Not a medical questionnaire. My life. Where I had been. How I was sleeping. Why I was there. We talked for twenty-five minutes before she touched any equipment.
Then she said something I haven’t stopped thinking about:
Treatments can be a boost. Lifestyle is what stays.
She wasn’t selling me anything. She was telling me that the IV drip I was about to receive — and any treatment Healthi Life could offer me — would not fix me. Lifestyle would. The treatments could help on top of that. The foundation had to come first.
I walked out of that house knowing I had been right to stop, and that I had found someone I wanted to work with for the long term.
After
I’m in an Elite Longevity Program at Healthi Life now. Real bloodwork, real biomarkers, real conversations about what’s actually changing.
The old business is gone. I accepted that in April, six weeks before writing this. The damage from fifteen years doesn’t undo in six months. I am, by every honest measure, still in the middle of this.
I sold joy on the internet for fifteen years. Most of it was real. Some of it was a performance I didn’t fully realize I was doing.
The thing I hadn’t understood for most of those years is that I was not the boy who left Germany at twenty anymore, and at some point, I had stopped enjoying the life I had built to prove that I was.
The trip wasn’t the problem. The problem was that I had built the trip to answer one question — how do I live a life that’s mine — and at some point I had stopped asking it. I was just still answering.
Tim Kroeger is a luxury wellness travel specialist and creator of The Restorative Index. He races internationally, recovers at the world’s best wellness hotels, and documents his longevity journey as the official Founding Ambassador of Healthi Life Longevity House in Bangkok.
With 15+ years of full-time travel across 112+ countries, 5,000+ hotel nights of experience, and 230+ nights personally tested, he reviews luxury wellness hotels through one lens: Did you leave feeling better than when you arrived?

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