I Can’t Live at a Spa.
So I Did This Instead.

Blogpost about Sometimes I fantasize I'm on a retreat

Sometimes I fantasize about being on a retreat.

Somewhere beautiful and peaceful, with tasty and healthy food appearing at regular intervals, a loose schedule of yoga classes and meditations, and absolutely no obligations or anybody wanting anything from me.

I just float through the day and feel taken care of.

The One Time It Was Actually Real

I’ve only been on one actual retreat in my life. A one-week yoga retreat in Spain in a gorgeous village house, with daily yoga practices, and fantastic vegan food.

The closest thing to that in my hometown is a sauna/spa I recently went to for the third time. It’s called Va Bali — the architecture, the decoration, and the Balinese greeting from the sauna personnel right before they torture naked customers with a hot sauna infusion.

The spa overlooks a tranquil lake and looks like a small high-end resort hotel. Every time I go, I’m instantly serene and relaxed.

This is how I want to feel in my life.

Not the tightness, tension, frustration, boredom, busyness, exasperation that comes up so frequently in daily life for me.

As I was lounging on the deck chair next to the placid lake, sipping my tea infusion and surrounded by other naked humans in colorful bath robes, I started thinking about how to get more of that into my daily life.

Regrettably I don’t live at Va Bali, a Spanish yoga retreat or the real Bali, and I have a toddler at home — basically the Antichrist of retreat.

My (Very Realistic) Solution: Pockets of Retreat

As a compromise, I’ve decided to introduce pockets of retreat in my life. Here’s what that looks like:

Once a week: the retreat hour

After toddler bedtime, I give myself a retreat hour. I go to the one clean room in our apartment and have a gentle yoga practice with dimmed light and an expensive scented candle. Followed by a tasty cup of tea while I cozy up on the sofa in my bath robe and read something fun or inspirational.

Once a month: the no-obligation window

When my partner is out with our toddler, I give myself 1-2 hours of no-obligation chill time. I’ve banned myself from using that time for housework, to do’s or side hustle tasks. It’s my guilt-free chunk of quiet time that I get to spend as I please — after I took eight minutes to put away the toys and wipe the yoghurt-smeared living room table.

Good Enough Is the Point

Would I want more? Definitely. But I need to work within the limits I have. That’s what I keep telling my toddler after all when I give her a choice between applesauce and yoghurt for breakfast.

These little retreat moments are not quite Bali or a Spanish yoga retreat, but they allow me to infuse a little of that peaceful, taken-care-of energy into my real life.

Grab the Free Guide

If you want to try this for yourself, I put together a free two-page guide called Create Your Mini-Retreat (That Actually Fits Your Life). It walks you through figuring out what makes you feel calm and taken care of, and then shrinking that into something you can realistically do in an hour — or less — in your home.
You can grab it here.
 
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Picture of by Katrin Kay

by Katrin Kay

I help moms with little kids enjoy motherhood more, not just survive it.

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