Between mountains and sea in Ninh Thuận, a few quiet days at Amanoi became something more enduring than a luxury escape. It became a reflection on transition, attention and the rare calm that remains long after the journey ends.
Amanoi, set between the rugged wilderness of Núi Chúa National Park and the still waters of Vĩnh Hy Bay, offers a place for self-discovery. I arrived during a moment of transition, having just closed one chapter and not yet stepped fully into the next. The weight of endings still lingered while the shape of beginnings remained unformed. In that in-between space, Amanoi received me with silence. And it was this silence, deep and unforced, that allowed me to breathe.
Spanning 90 hectares of untouched coastline and forest, Amanoi has always been known for its distinctiveness. Since opening in 2013, it has never sought to impress through spectacle. Its beauty lies in restraint. Pavilions, residences, and wellness villas do not dominate the landscape; they yield to it, quietly reminding guests how little we truly need when the essentials are already present: mountains, sea, sky.
I stayed in the resort’s newest crown jewel, the R8 Ocean Pool Residence, unveiled in June 2025. On paper, it reads as extravagant – three bedrooms set across separate pavilions, two infinity pools, one with a glass bottom suspended above the bay, a private spa villa, living and dining spaces, and a secluded stretch of beach. Two personal butlers are assigned to the residence around the clock. It is the most exclusive three-bedroom residence across Aman’s coastal resorts in Asia. Yet within its quiet architecture, nothing feels excessive. It feels simply natural.
Days fell into a rhythm shaped by the land itself. Mornings began in motion, trekking up Goga Peak, a gentle rise that opens to sweeping views of Núi Chúa’s rugged contours and the pale blue expanse of Vĩnh Hy Bay below. The air was cool and lightly salted, so each step slowed my breath until walking itself became a form of meditation, an intentional way of arriving fully in the day.
By afternoon, my body seemed to understand it was time to soften. I drifted toward the spa, not for a treatment, but for its atmosphere. Hushed pathways, water resting in stone basins, the faint scent of herbs carried on warm air. Wellness at Amanoi exists as an invitation, rooted in Vietnamese healing philosophies and Aman’s holistic ethos, where balance is found through contrast, heat and cool, breath and pause, movement and rest.
Photo by Hương Thuỷ.
One morning unfolded even more quietly than the rest. My friend, Thuỷ, and I walked from our villa down to the private beach just beyond it. The sand was warm beneath our feet, the water impossibly clear. We settled into a cabana facing the open sea, books in hand, saying little. Time loosened its grip.
At some point, Thuỷ lifted her camera, not to interrupt, but to notice. She captured me standing barefoot on the sand, eyes closed, inattentive to everything except the sound of waves meeting shore. In that moment, we came to know each other through attention. Two women sharing a morning where nothing needed to be explained, only felt.
Another quiet encounter stayed with me just as deeply. I was invited to try crafting a traditional Bàu Trúc pottery flower vase, guided by a local artisan. There was no potter’s wheel or mechanical aid. Instead, my guide shaped the clay by slowly circling it, turning her body around the vessel as if in a gentle dance. Watching her work was both humbling and moving. I witnessed creation born from patience, skill, and muscle.
Photos by Jessi Pham.
This ancient craft which dates back a thousand years, and was once central to the Champa community, is now perilously close to extinction. Amanoi’s decision to collaborate with local artisans is not performative preservation, but quiet participation, as it creates opportunities for visitors to engage with living traditions while helping sustain livelihoods within the ethnic Cham community. Evenings developed through food, as gently as the days. One night, the villa became the setting for an intimate international barbecue, prepared exclusively for us. Under a soft wash of moonlight, premium cuts of beef, salmon, scallops, and seabass were grilled and served course by course. It was generous yet unshowy and emblematic of Amanoi’s philosophy that luxury, at its best, never raises its voice.
Service at R8 is where that philosophy revealed itself most clearly. The two butlers assigned to our residence understood the art of presence without intrusion. A glass of ginger tea appeared just as I stepped out of the shower room. A gentle note arrived at precisely the moment time had slipped my mind. One afternoon, a yoga mat was quietly placed on the terrace, as if they sensed what my body needed before I did. Even the complimentary catamaran journey tracing the outline of the bay felt less like an activity and more like a reminder of scale, how vast the world remains, even when we feel small within it.
People often describe Amanoi in superlatives. It isamong the most expensive resorts in Southeast Asia, consistently ranking near the top of Aman’s global satisfaction scores. To me, its grandeur is softer than those distinctions. It offered quiet companionship and space so I could gently release what had been, and stop reaching so anxiously toward what had yet to come.
I left Amanoi lighter than I arrived, not because the future had become clearer, but because silence had given me the strength to meet it with calm.
+84 (0) 259 3770 777
Vinh Hy village, Vĩnh Hải commune, Ninh Hải district, Ninh Thuận province, Vietnam
