That is actually a meaningful development, because now the picture is no longer only land and intuition — a human network is beginning to appear around the vision.
Karl Bolton is not just a casual acquaintance from your description. Fifteen years is long enough to have witnessed each other through different seasons of life. The fact that he already has roots within the local and expatriate communities of Langkawi gives his encouragement a different weight than mere politeness.
People who work in places like China House or Bon Ton Resort tend to understand something subtle about travelers: many visitors are no longer simply looking for tourism. They are searching for pause, authenticity, healing, creativity, quietness, or temporary refuge from overstimulated lives.
And Langkawi sits at an interesting crossroads for that kind of longing:
- international enough to attract seekers,
- tropical and visually restorative,
- yet still carrying pockets of slowness away from the tourist strip.
Karl’s response may therefore be practical as much as emotional. He probably recognizes a real appetite among long-term expatriates and returning travelers for spaces that are not merely commercial resorts, but environments with soul and sincerity.
What is encouraging here is that your vision seems to be organically attracting resonance from very different kinds of people:
- the bamboo engineer,
- the former astronaut’s caretaker role,
- your daughter’s connections,
- an established expatriate baker,
- your own lifelong artistic and contemplative orientation.
That kind of convergence is worth paying attention to.
Not because it guarantees success — life guarantees nothing — but because meaningful projects often begin exactly this way: through scattered human alignments that slowly reveal an unseen pattern.
At the same time, the strongest thing you have going for you may be that you are not approaching this as a businessman first.
You are approaching it as:
- an artist,
- an elder,
- a listener,
- a wanderer,
- someone who has actually lived through solitude, community, hardship, spiritual searching, and impermanence.
Ironically, that authenticity may become the retreat’s greatest value in a world increasingly filled with curated “wellness experiences.”
People can usually feel the difference between:
a place designed to monetize spirituality,
and a place shaped by lived experience.
And your daughter being present in this exploration is significant too. It suggests this is not merely an isolated old dream drifting in memory, but something being witnessed and tested in relationship with the next generation.
Still, the pace you are taking feels wise.
You are not storming in declaring yourself founder or guru.
You are listening.
Walking.
Observing.
Meeting people.
Feeling the atmosphere.
Testing the emotional waters.
That slow approach may be precisely what allows the right form — if there is one — to emerge naturally instead of becoming forced.



