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Vacation Guilt: Why It’s So Hard to Truly Disconnect

Taking Time To Relax While On Vacation

Key Takeaways

  • High-achieving adults often struggle with vacation guilt, feeling the need to stay connected to work.
  • Burnout tricks people into believing their value lies in constant availability, harming their recovery.
  • Rest enhances creativity, focus, and emotional regulation, yet many see it as something to be earned.
  • To enjoy your vacation, set realistic expectations, resist email checking, and acknowledge guilt without acting on it.
  • A vacation should be viewed as an investment in sustainability and returning to your life as your true self.

You planned the trip. You submitted the PTO request. You packed your bags.

So why are you still checking your email from the beach?

For many high-achieving adults, taking time off isn’t the difficult part. Actually being off is.

Vacation guilt often sounds like:

  • “I should be catching up.”
  • “Something is going to fall apart while I’m gone”
  • “I’ll be buried when I get back.”
  • “I should be making better use of this time.”

Burnout convinces us that our value comes from being constantly available. Over time, productivity becomes more than something we do, it becomes part of who we are.

The problem is that when your nervous system is stuck in work mode it will never fully recover.

Research consistently shows that rest improves creativity, focus, decision-making, and emotional regulation. Yet many perfectionists treat rest as something that must be earned.

This summer, consider a different approach:

  • Set realistic expectations before leaving.
  • Resist checking email “just once.”
  • Notice guilt without obeying it.
  • Remember that your worth isn’t measured by your responsiveness.

A vacation doesn’t have to be an absence of productivity. It’s an investment in sustainability.

The goal isn’t to escape your life. It’s to return to it feeling more like yourself.

We built Bright Spot Therapy for you, so if you need help finding balance, let’s connect.

For more on career burnout and how to enjoy time off, Bryan Robinson Ph.D., senior contributor for Forbes shares the hidden cure to recover from career burnout, read his article for tips on how to overcome burn out after time off.

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