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Bali Love Story

Bali Beyond the Crowds: How the Island of Gods Rekindled My Creative Soul

Bali has a scent. If you've been, you know exactly what I mean. It’s a hypnotic mix of sweet frangipani, damp earth, clove cigarettes, and faint trails of incense from early-morning offerings. It’s the smell of serenity wrapped in a humid hug. And it’s precisely at that magical hour—just before the island fully wakes up—that I love to slip outside, camera in hand, sandals half on, heart wide open.

While much of the world heads straight for the beach clubs of Seminyak or the Instagrammable cafes of Canggu, I slowly fell for a different Bali. A quieter, slower, slightly sleepier Bali that doesn’t try to impress you—it just is. The Bali of the north. The Bali of whispers and wisdom. The Bali that led me back to photography, diving, and, unexpectedly, to myself.


Why Bali (But Not That Bali) Stole My Heart

Let’s get one thing straight: I love a good smoothie bowl as much as the next sun-chasing traveler. But the Bali that pulled me in and never quite let go isn’t the one you’ll find trending on TikTok. It’s the north—the lush, rugged part of the island where time meanders rather than marches. Think quiet coastal villages, narrow roads flanked by banana trees, and a sky so wide it could swallow your worries whole.

The charm here is unfiltered. The roads are bumpier, the smiles are even warmer, and the air is full of stories. It’s here that I began to feel like more than just a visitor. I wasn’t checking off sites—I was tuning in. The silence wasn’t empty; it was filled with the rustle of palm leaves and distant chanting. And it changed something in me.

road in Pemuteran during sunrise
catching the sunrise in Pemuteran

The Smell of Morning and the Rhythm of the Streets

There’s something sacred about early mornings in Bali. Before scooters buzz and the air heats up, the streets belong to the quiet. And to the women.

In sarongs and lace kebayas, they move gracefully, balancing trays of offerings—canang sari—on hips and heads, placing them with care at doorsteps, shrines, and intersections. Smoke curls from tiny bundles of burning incense. Flowers bloom in small woven baskets. Rice grains are gently scattered like whispered blessings.

That’s when I walk. Or rather, glide—trying to mirror their grace but probably looking more like a curious, barefooted penguin with a camera. I watch, listen, breathe. It’s not about capturing the perfect shot; it’s about letting the island seep into me through all five senses.

I’ve had more meaningful interactions before 8 a.m. in Bali than I’ve had during entire days elsewhere. A shy nod from a grandmother placing her offering. A toothy smile from a child helping sweep the temple courtyard. These little moments—the unposed, unfiltered ones—are what hooked me.


wooden toy of a Balinese child

From Island Time to Dive Time: Rediscovering the Ocean

Believe it or not, Bali also got me back into diving. I’d shelved my fins for a while. Life got in the way. Deadlines piled up.

Time felt like a luxury I couldn’t afford. And truth be told, I’d been avoiding the water ever since a panic attack right after my open water certification—two decades ago. But then came one trip, and one person: Komang, our dive instructor and now dear friend. With gentle encouragement and patience, he reintroduced me to the underwater world. That single dive cracked open something inside me. I haven’t stopped since—exploring new dive sites, and collecting certifications like seashells

And what a re-entry it was. Menjangan Island—Bali’s lesser-known underwater gem—welcomed me back with open arms and clear visibility. Just off the coast of Pemuteran, this tiny island floats like a forgotten treasure chest. The dives here are calm and colorful, with dramatic drop-offs, vibrant coral gardens, and the occasional turtle who seems entirely unbothered by our presence.

Every descent felt like an exhale. Every school of fish a silent cheerleader. I remembered why I loved diving in the first place—it’s meditation with bubbles. There’s no multitasking underwater. No to-do lists. Just breath, movement, and wonder.

Now, I make it a point to dive every time I return. Menjangan never disappoints.


hawksbill turtle

People of Bali: Conversations That Changed Me

I’ve always been curious, but Bali made me hungry for understanding. The Balinese aren’t just friendly—they’re philosophers, artists, caretakers, and storytellers all at once.

Over countless cups of Bali kopi, I’ve sat with elders who told me about the island’s spirits, offerings, and ceremonies. I’ve listened to a gamelan player explain the symbolism in each note. I’ve asked too many questions and been met with nothing but patience.

One conversation I’ll never forget happened in a village near Munduk. I was speaking with a local priest who explained how every offering is a conversation—a thank you, a wish, a plea. "We live in balance," he said. "With nature, with spirits, with each other. If you take, you give. If you fall, you rise. It’s all part of the dance."

That stayed with me. And maybe, just maybe, that belief system started to seep into how I approached my own life—and my art.


female Balinese dancer


A Colorful Muse: How Bali Sparked My Portrait Photography

Before Bali, I photographed landscapes. Trees don’t blink. Mountains don’t move. They’re safe subjects for a control freak with a camera. But Bali’s people? Oh, they changed everything.


There’s a certain glow that Balinese faces carry. A light that comes from centuries of culture, belief, and connection. Whether it’s a rice farmer bathed in golden light or a dancer mid-prayer behind temple curtains, each face tells a layered story.


At first, I was nervous. Pointing a lens at someone feels intimate, sometimes intrusive. But I learned quickly that the magic lies in the conversation before the click. I started spending time with my subjects—and let them speak. And when I finally did raise my camera, it wasn’t about capturing a face. It was about honoring a moment.

Bali taught me that portrait photography isn’t about perfection—it’s about presence.


elder Balinese woman

Finding Peace (and Myself) Among Penjor and Rice Terraces

There’s a calm that hangs in Bali’s air, especially in the north. It’s in the sway of the penjor—those tall, curved bamboo poles decorated for ceremonies. It’s in the slow shimmer of rice terraces at sunrise. It’s in the deep green of the jungle that threatens to swallow you whole—and you kind of want it to.

I come to Bali to breathe. To remember that fast isn’t always better, that silence isn’t empty, and that peace doesn’t always come with a price tag or a spa package.

When I’m here, I let go of expectations. Of noise. Of pressure. I listen more. I shoot slower. I dive deeper—literally and figuratively. Bali doesn’t just host me. It holds me.


father and son overlooking Tegalalang rice terrace during sunrise

Final Thoughts + An Invitation

So here I am, years and dozens of visits later, still hopelessly, beautifully entangled with this island. Bali gave me back my curiosity, my creativity, and a gentler rhythm of living. It reawakened my love for the underwater world, introduced me to the art of meaningful portraiture, and taught me that the best stories are found in quiet corners.


If you’ve only seen Bali through the lens of hashtags and travel vlogs, I invite you to look again. Look slower. Look softer.

And if you're curious to see what this island has inspired in me, head over to my portfolio—a small window into the big, colorful love story I continue to write with Bali.


Photos from my journeys through Bali are sprinkled throughout this post. Each image is a memory, a conversation, a breath. I hope they make you feel even a fraction of what I feel when I’m there.

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© 2024 Lynn Peiffer

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