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Why Learning On Holiday Is Becoming The New Way To Travel

Report by Leadership and Change Expert Janice Elsley

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For a long time, I thought holidays were about escape.

Escape from the inbox. Escape from meetings. Escape from the constant rhythm of responsibility that so many of us carry without even realising how heavy it has become.

But over the years, both in my own life and through my work with leaders, I have started to see something shift. People are no longer travelling simply to switch off. They are travelling to come back to themselves.

This is where the growing trend of learning on holiday becomes so powerful.

I have spent more than two decades working with leaders, executives, business owners and organisations through periods of change, growth and reinvention. Much of my career has been spent in boardrooms, strategy sessions and leadership programs, helping people understand how they lead, how they communicate and how they create cultures where people can thrive.

What I have learned is that people rarely transform because they are given more information.

They transform when they finally have the space to integrate what they already know.

Like many women, I know what it is to move through life being highly capable. Raising a family, building a career, supporting others, managing expectations and holding together all the invisible pieces that often sit behind the scenes. It is rewarding, but it can also be exhausting.

I suspect many women will relate to that feeling. Midlife often becomes a balancing act between raising children, supporting ageing parents, managing careers or businesses and navigating our own health and wellbeing. It’s a stage of life that can be enormously rewarding, but it can also be exhausting. We become so accustomed to carrying multiple responsibilities that we rarely stop to consider the impact it has on us.

For many people, the first real pause does not happen at home. It happens when they step away.

That is what I have always found so powerful about travel. A different landscape has a way of disrupting familiar patterns. You wake at a different pace. You notice the sky. You sit longer over breakfast. You have conversations that do not feel rushed. You begin to hear thoughts that have been buried beneath deadlines, decisions and daily demands.

New Zealand has always held that kind of feeling for me.

There is something about the mountains, the water and the vastness of the landscape that immediately brings perspective. In Queenstown especially, the environment almost invites you to breathe differently. The scale of nature reminds you that life is bigger than your to-do

list, and that the nervous system often needs beauty, space and stillness before it can access clarity.

This is why learning while travelling feels so different to learning in an office, online course or conference room.

When people are away from their normal environment, they are often more open. Their defences soften. Their thinking expands. They are not just listening with their mind, but experiencing the learning through their body, their emotions and their surroundings.

For leaders, this matters deeply.

The future of leadership will not be built on burnout, over-functioning or constant performance. It will require leaders who are emotionally intelligent, self-aware, adaptable and able to make decisions from a place of calm rather than pressure.

That kind of leadership cannot be developed by simply doing more.

It requires reflection. It requires restoration. It requires the courage to question the patterns that have kept us successful, but not always well.

Learning holidays create a rare opportunity for this. They bring together education, experience, connection and environment in a way that allows people to not only understand new ideas, but live them.

Someone may arrive thinking they need rest, but often they discover they need a new relationship with success. They may come for the scenery, but leave with a clearer sense of who they are becoming. They may believe they are simply taking time out, only to realise that stepping away was the very thing that allowed them to see their life and leadership more clearly.

I believe this is why more people are seeking travel experiences that offer more than a beautiful destination. They want meaning. They want growth. They want to learn something about themselves that they can carry home.

A holiday may give you memories.

But the right journey can give you perspective.

And sometimes, the most powerful learning does not happen under fluorescent lights or between back-to-back meetings.

Sometimes, it happens in the mountains.

More About Janice Elsley

Janice Elsley is an international leadership expert who blends psychology, neuroscience, and real world leadership experience to help people lead with confidence.

Janice is the author of the best selling book Leadership Legacy: 7 Strategies Every CEO, Business Owner, or Leader Needs to Know to Attract and Retain Top Talent.

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