Travel as Therapy: Can a Vacation Cure Burnout?
When daily tasks turn into an endless to-do list, and morning coffee no longer invigorates, a persistent thought increasingly arises: “It's time to leave.” It seems that all you need to do is buy tickets from Moscow to Istanbul or find affordable tickets from St. Petersburg to Kaliningrad, and all problems will miraculously disappear. But before packing your suitcase, it's worth figuring out: will this trip be a lifeline or just a temporary painkiller?

Is a vacation a band-aid or a full-fledged cure?
Psychologists often say that a change of scenery is a powerful tool for resetting the nervous system. However, it's important to distinguish between a temporary respite and deep internal work.
If your goal is simply to stop seeing your desktop and endless messenger notifications, then a trip will work like a high-quality medical band-aid. You shift your attention to new smells, architecture, and sounds of a foreign city. Your brain, starved for new impressions, actively begins to produce dopamine, while cortisol levels – the main stress hormone – gradually decrease.
This "tourist" state allows the psyche to relax a bit, but the root of the problem remains untouched. If burnout is caused by chronic overwork, a simple change of scenery will only provide a temporary effect.
When travel turns into an escape
Burnout is not just fatigue that can be "slept off" over a weekend. It is a deep exhaustion of emotional and physical resources. If you hope that a week on a sunny beach will solve the problem of toxic management, lack of career growth, or loss of meaning in what you do, inevitable disappointment awaits you.
In this case, a vacation turns into classic escapism – an attempt to run away from a reality you don't want to face. Upon returning home, you will inevitably face the same "Groundhog Day," and the energy accumulated during your vacation will evaporate in just a couple of working days. You will realize that you brought back in your luggage not only souvenirs but also the same unresolved conflicts and inner emptiness.

How to turn a trip into real therapy?
To ensure your vacation isn't just an expensive attempt to hide from life, but genuinely helps you cope with burnout, try changing your approach to planning and the vacation process itself:
1. Total information detox
The most important point. Promise yourself not to open work chats or check emails. Even if it seems like the world will collapse without your control. Allow yourself to fully immerse in the "here and now." Constant connection with the office via a smartphone screen is not rest, but work in a different time zone.
2. The Art of Slowing Down (Slow Travel)
Forget about lists like "10 places to visit in 48 hours." Trying to do it all is another type of stress. Try to live one day at the pace of the locals: have a long breakfast on a cafe veranda, wander aimlessly through the streets, watch the sunset in a quiet park. Your task is to let your brain rest from multitasking.
3. Honest Reflection
Use your time on the plane, train, or during long solitary walks to ask yourself uncomfortable questions. What exactly in my usual life drains all my energy? Why do I want to escape from it so badly? Sometimes, it's only when we're away from home that we finally hear our own voice, muffled by city noise.
Summing up
Travel will not replace systematic self-work or unilaterally rewrite your employment contract. However, it can give you something invaluable – distance. From this distance, your problems may not seem so insurmountable, and solutions more obvious.
Self-care begins not at the check-in counter, but at the moment you admit: "I need rest, and I have the right to it." And for the technical part – tickets, routes, and your peace of mind – professionals are responsible, to make your journey to yourself as comfortable and pleasant as possible.




