There’s something magical about packing a bag, booking a ticket, and going somewhere, just for you. No waiting on anyone. No trying to please anybody. Just your pace, your choices, your healing.
That’s what solo travel is to me. Not a trend. Not an escape. But a deep form of me time, the kind that fills the soul in ways nothing else quite can.

I used to think solo travel was for the brave, the adventurous, the ones who had it all figured out. Until one day, I wasn’t running from anything or chasing anything, I just needed to breathe.
To hear my own thoughts without the noise.
To sit in a café and not be expected to talk.
To walk down unfamiliar streets and rediscover the parts of me that routine had buried.
So I traveled. Alone.
And I found peace in the stillness.
As women, we’re often taught to think of rest as a reward, not a right. We carry so much, work, home, motherhood, friendship, expectations, and somewhere in between, we lose track of our own rhythm.
Solo travel gave me that back.
I remember my first solo trip. I was nervous. I kept overthinking everything. What if something goes wrong? What if I feel lonely? What if people stare?
But do you know what actually happened?
I woke up slow. I took long walks. I took myself out to eat and didn’t feel awkward. I discovered the joy of being good company for myself.
I felt seen, by me.

There’s a kind of healing that happens when you’re alone in a new place. You stop performing. You stop explaining. You simply exist. And in that space, you hear your inner voice louder and clearer than ever.
You begin to ask:
- What do I really enjoy?
- What makes me feel alive?
- What parts of me have I ignored?
And suddenly, what started as a trip becomes a homecoming to yourself.
I know solo travel isn’t always easy or accessible. Safety is real. Cost is real. Fear is real.
But sometimes, “solo travel” doesn’t have to mean leaving the country. Sometimes, it’s just a weekend in a nearby town. A staycation. A day trip. A walk with no agenda.
What matters is the intention behind it:
To pour back into yourself.
To rest, not to be productive, but to be present.
To reconnect with your own joy.
There’s strength in being able to sit with yourself and be okay.
There’s beauty in being your own adventure.
And there’s something deeply sacred about saying, “I matter too.”
So yes, as a woman, I absolutely see solo travel as self-care. It’s not just about the destination, it’s about reclaiming your own space in the world. It’s choosing yourself, on purpose, with joy.
And the best part?
When you come back, you don’t just return refreshed.
You return rooted.
In yourself. In your strength. In your softness.
Because solo doesn’t mean lonely.
Solo can mean whole.