I want to go.
But with who?
The idea always comes the same way. You're at your desk on some random Tuesday and you think: I could just go work from somewhere beautiful. A week in the Dolomites. A few days in Sicily. A hilltop village in Tuscany. I have my laptop, I have my job -- what's stopping me?
Then you think about it for five minutes and the answer arrives: everything. Everything is stopping you.
Your partner has to go to the office
The first person you tell is your partner. The conversation goes more or less like this:
End of conversation. Not because your partner is being difficult. They're right. Leaving while the other person stays home working is complicated. It's not just logistics -- it's relationship balance, it's "why you and not me," it's feeling guilty for a privilege the other person doesn't have.
Ok, so you try your friends.
Your friends can't come
You call your most adventurous friend. The one who always says "we should take a trip together." The conversation is even shorter:
There it is. The comment every remote worker has heard at least a hundred times. "Why waste the trip if you have to work." As if working from a beautiful place were a contradiction. As if the value of a trip could only be measured by the hours you're not working.
People who don't work remotely can't understand that working in the morning from a farmhouse overlooking the hills and then having an incredible experience in the afternoon isn't "wasting the trip." It's living the trip in a different way -- and often a better way -- than a normal vacation.
But trying to explain this is exhausting. So you give up on your friends too.
So who do I go with?
You're left with your laptop on the desk, on a Tuesday afternoon, with the idea slowly dying. Because the truth is this: going to work from a beautiful place alone is sad. Working in silence in the morning is fine -- you already do that at home. But the afternoon? The evening? Having dinner alone in a restaurant in a village where you don't know anyone? Going on a hike by yourself? That's not what you want.
You want to share the experience with someone. But not just anyone -- with people who understand. Who work like you. Who don't look at you funny if you open your laptop at 9 AM instead of going to the beach. Who are on calls in the morning just like you and in the afternoon want to explore just like you.
The problem isn't finding the place. It's finding the people to go there with.
The wall of real life
And then there's another thing nobody ever talks about. Going to work from a beautiful place isn't as straightforward as it seems -- especially if you have a family.
"I have two small kids." Leaving for a week means asking your partner to handle everything alone. Or organizing incredibly complicated logistics. Not impossible, but not exactly "pack a bag and go."
"Who's going to watch the dog?" It sounds trivial, but it's a real obstacle. If you don't have someone you trust, you're not going. Period.
"I can't spend vacation money on this." A "work week" isn't a vacation -- and the budget isn't the same. You need something accessible, not a resort at $250 a night.
"I don't even know where to go." Finding a place with reliable Wi-Fi, spaces to work, things to do in the afternoon, that's not too far away -- it's a job within a job. Who has time for that?
All these obstacles, put together, create a wall. And that wall means that most remote workers who theoretically could work from anywhere in the world end up working from the same place every day. Home.
One week. Just one.
Remwork was born to break down that wall. Not by asking you to change your life, become a nomad, or leave for months. By asking you for one week. Just one.
A week where you don't have to organize anything. You don't have to find the place, check the Wi-Fi, plan the activities, convince someone to come with you. We take care of everything -- you just have to say yes.
What you'll find in a Remwork week:
8-12 people like you. Remote workers who understand your life without you having to explain it.
A perfect setup for working. Wi-Fi, silence, dedicated spaces. Tested by us.
Experiences you wouldn't do alone. Organized by people who know the territory.
Dinners, conversations, connections. The evenings you no longer have at home.
You don't need to convince your partner to come -- this is a week for you, just like they have their own things. You don't need to convince your friends -- your travel companions are already there. You don't need to organize anything -- the place, the Wi-Fi, the experiences, the dinners: it's all ready.
And it's not a vacation. It's a work week -- but in a beautiful place, with people who speak your language, living experiences you would never have had at home. A week after which you come back with new ideas, new connections, and the feeling that you did something for yourself.
You don't need someone to come with you. You need someone who's already there.
Remwork is that someone. Actually, it's 8-12 someones. And they're waiting for you.