Why I Don’t Need Vacations Anymore (And Maybe You Don’t Either)

There was a time in my life when I couldn’t imagine getting through the year without two or three vacations.

A ski trip here. A beach week there. These breaks felt absolutely essentialβ€”like oxygen. Without them, I’d run on empty.

But some years ago, this has shifted.

I noticed I no longer feel the need to β€œget away” so often. And I started wonderingβ€”why?


🧠 The Science Behind Needing a Break

It turns out, this isn’t just personal. Research supports what many of us experience without fully understanding it.

When our daily lives are filled with stress or feel disconnected from what truly matters to us, vacations often serve as a recovery tool. A study in the Journal of Happiness Studies found that people often feel happier and more satisfied right after a vacation, but the effect fades quickly once they return to their normal routine.

It’s not that the vacation wasn’t enjoyableβ€”it’s that the underlying stress was never resolved.


πŸ” The Burnout Cycle

For many, this leads to a cycle:

Work hard β†’ feel depleted β†’ take a vacation β†’ recover β†’ return to burnout.

Sound familiar?

I used to live in that loop too. But something changed when I began spending more time doing work I actually care about. Work that feels creative, meaningful, and energizingβ€”even when it’s challenging.


🎯 Flow: The Opposite of Burnout

Psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi coined the term β€œflow”—a mental state where we’re so engaged in an activity that we lose track of time and feel deeply fulfilled.

Flow isn’t just enjoyableβ€”it’s good for us. People who regularly experience it report:

  • Lower stress
  • Greater focus
  • Higher life satisfaction

I’ve found that when my days include more moments like thisβ€”whether I’m flying drones, editing videos, writing, or just being outdoorsβ€”I feel less drained. And because I’m not constantly burning out, I don’t crave escape in the same way.


🌍 Not Everyone Feels This Wayβ€”And That’s Okay

This doesn’t mean I never want a vacation again. It also doesn’t mean that if you do need a break, something is wrong with you.

We all have different lives, responsibilities, and energy levels. Some people find real renewal in regular time offβ€”and that’s valid and healthy.

But for anyone who finds themselves counting the days until their next vacation, maybe it’s worth asking:

What is my day-to-day life asking for? Is there a way to build more joy, creativity, or control into itβ€”so that I’m not always waiting to escape it?


✨ Vacations as Exploration, Not Escape

These days, I still love travelβ€”but for different reasons.

Instead of needing to disconnect completely, I now see trips as chances to explore, be inspired, and deepen what I already enjoy. There’s no urgency to β€œunplug.” And that shift, for me, feels like real freedom.


πŸ’¬ Final Thought

Needing fewer vacations doesn’t mean I’m always productive or have life figured out. But it does point to one thing: I’m living in a way that feels more aligned with what matters to me.

And maybe that’s a question worth asking ourselves:

What would a life look like if we didn’t constantly need a break from it?

Not because we’re superhuman.

But because we’ve chosen a path that nourishes usβ€”little by little, day by day.

One response to “Why I Don’t Need Vacations Anymore (And Maybe You Don’t Either)”

  1. Rolf Avatar
    Rolf

    Interesting thoughts. I agree we should avoid getting burnt out and being in dire need of a break in the first place.

    I felt I was in this vicious cycle for too long. Work was depleting me, and all that kept me going was the prospect of the next holiday. At the beginning of the year I got a new job with a better work environment and proper work-life balance, and I’m a calmer and happier person now.

    That said, I will be going on holiday on Saturday, but the feeling of anticipation of new experiences is stronger than that of feeling I need a break. But I would have to lie if I said that it won’t be nice to forget about work for a while… πŸ˜‰.

    Like

Leave a comment

This blog is for thoughtful adults who are starting again β€” in learning, creativity, or life β€” and want to grow steadily without noise or pressure.

Here you’ll find daily reflections and practical guides shaped by lived experience. The focus is on learning through doing: building consistency, adapting to change, and finding clarity in everyday practice.

The stories and guides here come from real processes β€” creative experiments, hands-on projects, life in rural Japan, working with nature, and learning new skills step by step. Nothing is rushed. Nothing is polished for performance. The aim is steady progress, honest reflection, and practical insight you can actually use.

If you’re curious about life in Japan, learning new skills at your own pace, or finding a calmer, more intentional way forward, you’re in the right place.

Receive Daily Short Stories from Karl

You can unsubscribe anytime with a few button clicks.

Continue reading