Founding
Story
Two paths, one shared Lifestyle desire
Adelina had built a career at the highest levels of the global technology world, shaping strategy, leading teams, and making decisions where pace, clarity, and execution were non-negotiable. From the outside, it looked like success — recognition, responsibility, influence. From the inside, it became increasingly clear that momentum without presence slowly erodes meaning, sustainability, and health. Performance was possible, even celebrated, but recovery was not built into the system. Over time, the body compensated, the nervous system suffered, and what once felt energizing started to feel costly.
Guillermo had spent years behind the bar in some of Barcelona’s most iconic venues, mastering the craft of hospitality through long hours of service, precision, and care for others. Night after night, he cultivated atmosphere, connection, and ritual — always attentive, always present for those he served. He understood deeply how environments shape experience, and how small details create a sense of belonging. Yet his own body began to signal what the rhythm would not allow: constant output has limits. What once felt expressive and alive gradually became a pace that left little room for restoration and joy.
Different worlds on the surface, yet shaped by the same underlying tension: high responsibility, continuous demand, and a culture that rewards endurance while ignoring its cost.
Both had learned to function under pressure, to adapt, to push through. Both had also learned that adaptation, when it becomes permanent, quietly disconnects you from your own signals.
Their conversations turned toward another way of living — not a fantasy of escape, but a practical reorientation. One where ambition did not cancel calm. Where caring for others did not require self-neglect. Where work, creativity, and contribution could exist alongside rhythm, recovery, and internal clarity.
They were not looking to step away from work or projects. They wanted to combine work and life differently — to create a structure where effort and restoration support each other instead of competing. And they sensed that many others were living with the same quiet friction: functioning well on the outside, while something essential was being overridden on the inside.
They wanted to build what they themselves had been missing: a place, a method, and a rhythm that allow people to come back into internal agreement — without dropping their lives, their responsibilities, or their ambitions.
The birth of Verda Wellness Club
Verda was not born as an escape, but as a commitment — to turn lived experience into a place where recalibration becomes possible.
Adelina brings strategic vision and over two decades of immersion in wellness, guiding people on the edge of burnout toward practices that restore clarity, self-regulation, and internal stability. Her work integrates meditation, herbalism, nervous system regulation, and rhythmic detox — not as separate techniques, but as a coherent system that respects how the body actually recovers and reorganizes.
Guillermo brings the warmth of a natural host and the precision of a craftsman. He transforms mixology into conscious nourishment, movement into structure, and daily ritual into something that supports rather than drains. His work bridges strength and gentleness, effort and enjoyment, helping people rebuild capacity without rigidity.
Together, they created Verda as a living system — a place where detox is not punishment but a return to essentials; where movement is not obligation but dialogue; where wellness is not an ideal to chase, but a way of organizing life with intelligence and care.
Verda brings together four essential layers — inner safety, physical reset, embodied vitality, and conscious daily living — designed to work in sequence, not extremes. The aim is not optimization, but coherence: a state where the body, nervous system, and daily life stop pulling in different directions.
Opening the doors of Verda House
Verda House sits between worlds — between city and nature, between responsibility and rest, between constant input and the silence that allows things to reorganize.
It is designed to settle the body before asking anything of it. To reduce noise before adding structure. To restore rhythm before demanding output. The environment, the food, the practices, and the pace are all shaped to support regulation first — because without regulation, nothing integrates.
Verda does not promise transformation or perfection. It offers something more honest: space to pause, to listen, to restore rhythm, and to learn ways of living that remain intact when you return home.
Here, two people from different professional paths open the door and say: we know this pace; we know this pressure.
And from that place, they offer what they once needed themselves — time, presence, and a living environment where life becomes simpler, clearer, and more coherent when it is truly listened to.
Verda is not a pause from life.
It is a way back into it.