Why Holidays Start Stressing You Out Before You Even Leave
The week before a holiday often feels worse than everything that came before it. The packing, the handovers, the quiet pressure to arrive looking and feeling like someone who deserves a break. And underneath all of it, the assumption that the moment you land, you will switch off. Completely. Gratefully. On cue. It doesn't usually work like that. And even when you get there, the list doesn't stop. It just changes subject. The Instagram spots. The books you finally packed. The tan you're supposed to come back with. The fun you've scheduled. The rest you're planning to achieve. At some point the holiday became something to perform — and most people are too depleted to notice it happened. What Your Body is Doing While You Hold it Together Under sustained pressure, your body adapts. Cortisol — your primary stress hormone — rises to meet the demand. It keeps you alert, suppresses inflammation, and allows you to function at a pace that isn't really sustainable. Your immune system quietly steps back. The body is prioritising threat response. Everything else can wait. The research on this is consistent. Prolonged psychological stress suppresses immune function. The body deprioritises the slow, expensive work of immune surveillance when it believes it has more pressing problems. Most people stay functional — just — until the moment they stop. And then they stop. What Happened When I Stopped A few years ago I went on a once-in-a-lifetime trip. The kind you save for. I had wanted to go for years. The months before it had been, quietly, one of the most depleting of my adult life. Not dramatic. Just relentless. The kind of tired that doesn't show up on your face but lives somewhere behind your eyes. You don't register how empty you are when you're in it. You just keep moving because the holiday is coming, and that will fix it. I arrived and got pneumonia. My body had been waiting. The moment I finally stopped, my immune system caught up with everything it had been deferring. The holiday just gave it permission to say so. There is a specific quality to standing at an ancient sacrificial site, somewhere you have waited years to see, while running a fever high enough that you're not entirely sure you aren't about to become part of the history. The tour guide was telling us to stay for the alligator mummies. I was trying to establish whether I was about to pass out. There's an unspoken contract on group holidays — you show up, you keep up, you don't become the problem. It took longer than it should have to persuade people I was genuinely ill. It felt like extraordinary bad luck. It wasn't. It was a completely predictable outcome of arriving with nothing left in me. Rest Doesn't Always Feel Like Rest Nobody really tells you that recovery — real recovery, after sustained depletion — doesn't feel like relaxation. It feels like your system processing everything it didn't have time to feel. The sleep that goes on for eleven hours and still isn't enough. The flatness. The strange absence of enjoyment even somewhere you wanted to be. This is not you doing holidays wrong. This is your nervous system doing what it was always going to do when you finally gave it space. The bill arriving, as it always does, eventually. The wellness industry has very little to say at this stage, largely because there's nothing to sell. No supplement reverses six weeks of accumulated overwork in a long-haul flight. The evidence on recovery from chronic stress is consistent on one uncomfortable point: the process is slower than we want it to be, and it doesn't respond well to being rushed. What I Do Now I'm not especially organised about this the rest of the year, but time off is sacred to me in a way it wasn't before I nearly passed out at an ancient sacrificial site. So in the month before a trip — and throughout it — I'm consistent about two things: sleep and gut health. I haven't become someone with a protocol, but I've learned what it costs to arrive empty, and I'd rather not pay it again. The week before you leave is part of the recovery, not an obstacle to it. Arriving depleted is not neutral. A holiday cannot undo what months of pressure have done to your body — it can only begin to, if you give it something to work with. That starts before you pack. The goal isn't a perfect holiday. It's arriving with enough left that you can actually let it be one.