Travel Solo for the Good of Your Relationships


Partners share interests but they also have unique interests as well. Take the time to explore them on separate vacations.

Many happy couples take separate vacations. Travel is a great way for each to realize individual goals and return to the relationship satisfied with having achieved personal dreams and filled with new vigor and stories to tell.

Separate vacations solo send you both off to expand yourselves. Whether you spend the time in an archive and they spend it fishing, or you spend it hiking and they go off on an architectural tour, both of you return as more interesting people with new perspectives, learning, and confidence.

Having traveled solo, you each see the world with fresh eyes and see each other that way as well. Solo travel has the potential to reignite a relationship by reigniting you.

However, there can be issues associated with separate vacations. Here are a few and how to address them.

aerial image of plitvice lakes
My husband likes to joke that I allowed him to join me on our honeymoon. Yet, even then, we took one day apart. I wanted to go to the Plitvice Lakes and Simon didn’t. So, we did our own things during the day and had lots to share when we had dinner together that night.

How to Tell Your Partner You Want to Take a Solo Vacation

Many couples who plan separate vacations come to the idea simply because they have different interests. Others struggle with whether separate vacations are a good idea for them. Perhaps one wants to travel solo but it’s never been discussed. How do you tell your partner you want to travel solo? Here are a few tips.

1. Tell them when your relationship is on solid ground.

Don’t suggest solo travel if your relationship is stumbling. In such a case, your partner will likely feel threatened and discussion could become heated. While solo travel can enrich a relationship, if you set out without your partner’s support, it may do the opposite. Plus, there are better ways of caring for a relationship in trouble than traveling solo.

2. Don’t spring the idea of separate vacations on an unsuspecting partner. 

Muse aloud about taking time on your own well in advance of having the talk. Start with the notion of taking a few hours or a day to yourself. Then build to the discussion that someday you’ll want to travel on your own. Don’t start with the trip itself as your partner may want to join you. Start with the notion of solo travel.

3. Make it a joint decision. 

Let the plan for separate vacations grow naturally based on caring for both your partner’s needs and interests and your own.

4. Choose a destination of no interest to your partner.

Talk about destinations that would be uniquely of interest to you so that you aren’t robbing your partner of a trip they’d really like to take with you.

5. Explain why you want to go solo.

You may want to travel solo to to do things that are not of interest your partner. That’s an easy conversation. If it’s simply that you need some alone time, you’ll need to dig a bit deeper to make your reason non-threatening. Whatever your reasons, share them openly and honestly. With little hidden, you’ll leave behind a more confident partner.

6. Share what you hope to bring back to your relationship.

Travel solo to enrich your life personally and with the intent of returning and enriching your relationship as well. Explain that both are important to you.

images of woman at laptop and man spinning globe indicating planning travel without your partner

How to Plan Separate Vacations: Travel Without Your Partner

Here are a few tips to consider when planning separate vacations.

1. Decide on the timing together.

You may want to go at the same time or different times. Make the choice together and be very clear about departure and return dates.

2. Stay in touch (or not).

Plan together how much you’ll stay in touch. Some couples want a daily connection; others don’t want to hear a word until they’re together again. This may be a negotiation but hopefully you can come to a decision that suits both of you.

3. Don’t drop off the map when you’re on separate vacations.

Share your itinerary, including hotels, dates, and any changes with your partner. Both of you should be confident in the other’s safety.

4. Don’t document every thing, every minute.

Free yourself to live the experience. Your memories and stories will be better and enough to share when you return.

5. Don’t be concerned about every detail that is going on at home.

Set yourself free from daily responsibilities. Really travel solo.

6. Share when you return.

Be interested in each other’s vacations upon your returns. Even if what they did holds little interest for you, because it’s your partner and you love them, listen carefully. You’ll want the same from them.

Resources for Planning Separate Vacations

With over 800 posts on this site, it’s a challenge to identify just a few to help you with your travel plans. But this list will get you started.

take separate vacations and gain new perspectives
Gain new perspectives, interests, and experiences through solo travel and separate vacations.

The Benefits of Separate Vacations for Your Relationship

Why travel solo when you’re in a relationship? What are the upsides of travel without your partner? Here are just a few.

1. Travel solo and free others from guilt.

Many spouses aren’t interested in travel. By taking off solo, you are freeing your partner or friends of the guilt of holding you back.

2. Travel solo for more happiness.

Being happy yourself leads to making others happy as well. We all know how contagious a smile can be. Travel solo, come back happy, and spread the smiles.

3. Take separate vacations to rejuvenate.

If you have responsibilities to care for others – parents, children, friends, partners – taking some time to travel solo, to make yourself a priority for a while, will make you better able to care for those important people in your life.

4. Travel solo and avoid frustrating others. 

When traveling with others there has to be some give and take. However, if you’re still not getting enough of what you want from a trip, go solo. Don’t drag people where they don’t want to go.

5. Travel solo as a gift to others.

Sometimes, doing something selfish is actually giving a gift to someone else. If you have been generous with your time and talents, it’s likely that the recipients would like to return your generosity and feel good about you taking time to yourself.

6. Travel solo because the guilt is unnecessary.

In my experience, those people who carry guilt often have the least reasons to feel guilty. Natural caregivers and those who are thrust into caregiving roles may find it difficult to shed the responsibilities and travel solo. It may be hard work to do so but you should take care of yourself once in a while knowing that there is no reason to feel guilty.

Know that solo is not selfish and go.

Last updated: 28th August, 2024



Source link