We've all had those moments, whether you're drowning in work in a cramped cubicle or just tired of the daily grind. In those moments, a thought might cross your mind, like "I wish I could escape to a private island." Well, entrepreneur Kristina Roth actually made that happen. She's not just escaping to an island, she owns it. And she's opening it up to women worldwide. But men? They're not allowed. An idyllic island

SuperShe Island off the coast of Finland. Courtesy of Kristina Roth

SuperShe Island is tucked away in the Baltic Sea off the coast of Finland. The 8.4-acre (literal) no man's land features four newly renovated cabins and can accommodate 10 people. Its amenities give five-star resorts a run for their money, with Finnish saunas, spa-like facilities and beautifully decorated rooms. Daily wellness activities on the island include yoga, meditation, farm-to-table dining, cooking classes, fitness classes, nature activities and more.

The interior of a cabin at SuperShe Island. Courtesy of Kristina Roth

"It's beautiful…it has blueberry fields in the middle [of the island]," Roth tells CNBC Make It. "So in the summer when you walk, it's just like blueberry fields forever...it's really a little utopia." SuperShe? #MeToo Roth didn't start out in utopia. "I came with two pieces of luggage to New York, and I didn't know anyone, and I really started a business with no investors…," Roth, who is originally from Germany, tells CNBC Make It of the IT business she founded, Matisia Consultants. "I bootstrapped with a laptop and my brain, and I brought [the company] up to really high revenue numbers" — $65 million a year by the time she sold it, says Roth. Along the way there were plenty of people — many men — who underestimated her. "I'm a computer scientist, and I worked only with men. Ergo, how many times did I have to listen to 'Hey blondie, what are you doing here?' At least that was during my studies," says Roth. "And I think judging a book by its cover — again that's a cliché — that happens a lot in the tech world."

SuperShe founder Kristina Roth. Courtesy of Kristina Roth

One memory stands out. As CEO at Matisia Consultants, Roth was meeting with a new client. She arrived with a group of men in tow. All the client knew, she says, was that the CEO of the company was coming with a group of people. When they arrived, the client immediately assumed that one of the older gentlemen in the group was the CEO. "Immediately they went to him. He worked for me," Roth says. "They immediately went to him and shook his hand…and of course, I made fun of my client for the rest of the project. And I never forgot it." After Roth sold Matisia Consultants around two years ago (for an undisclosed sum), she began traveling and meeting women all around the world. Roth's success story "really seemed inspire other women, and other women's stories from other areas, whether it's fashion or art or sports, started to inspire me," she says. An idea began to take shape. "During my career, I went to a lot of women networking events," Roth says. "And honestly, I was bored out of my mind, like I didn't want to waste my time. It all felt so organized and so 'Hi, it's me, here's my business card.'" Roth wanted to create something better. SuperShe society was born. It began as a networking group and expanded to include a lifestyle blog, events and women-only retreats in luxurious locations such as Hawaii, Necker Island and Turks & Caicos. It was meant to create a fun way for women to network — a way that men have been networking for years, Roth says, whether it's at the golf course or the cigar club.

A SuperShe retreat in Hawaii. Courtesy of Kristina Roth

SuperShe "was 'Hey, let's go have a fun time, we're going to go surfing and hiking and kite boarding, we're going to get to know each other, I like you, you like me, guess what? We will help each other," she adds. Today, the SuperShe community currently touts around 3,000 members, according to Roth. Its pink-tinged Instagram profile plugs itself as a "not-so-secret society of women who share a thirst for living an exceptional life and a hunger for healthy living."

A SuperShe event in New York Courtesy of Kristina Roth

"For me, SuperShe is really striving to be an independent woman," Roth says. "Sometimes, during our lifecycle, we're not that independent. So striving to be emotionally, financially and on all levels, independent. Because guess what? That's the only time you can make decisions about your own future. If someone is paying your bills, if your emotionally co-dependent in a bad relationship, you're just really not able to be the best version of yourself." A female-only island just ups the ante. During her travels, the idea took root. She bought some property in Turks and Caicos, and had planned to hold a retreat there, but then Hurricane Irma came, hitting the region hard. Meanwhile, Roth had heard about the island in the Baltic Sea, ironically, from her boyfriend. "It was stuck in the back of my head, 'Someday, I wish I could escape to an island,'" Roth says. "The opportunity presented itself when I was in Finland, and of course I needed to strike immediately and make this dream happen." The island itself needed a lot of work, with no electricity, no water and no roads. Roth, who declines to disclose how much the renovations cost but does reveal it was "a lot," set about turning the island into a haven for women. That's about the time the Me Too movement began to grow. It was a narrative that was impossible to ignore and one that Roth calls "inspiring." The timing of SuperShe, she says, was perfect, if unplanned. How to land a spot on the island

The interior of a cabin at SuperShe Island. Courtesy of Kristina Roth