What does a holiday mean to you? Sunburn, exploring, swimming, eating, drinking? Going on a diet before and after?
Looking at your language and beliefs around holidays can help you make small shifts that could change that summer yo-yo experience.
When you go on holiday, do you think "I’m going to make the most of any sunshine, feel well, and re-energise"? Or do you think, "I’m on holiday and I can do what I want". These two thoughts will lead to different outcomes. The second may well lead to gaining 10 pounds and then thinking you need to go on a diet in September! If that thinking is starting to feel incongruent for you, that you’ve got that T-shirt one too many times, you may want to change your thinking before you have your holiday this year.
What language do you use to refer to your holiday?
The word ‘holiday’ itself comes from the Old English for special religious days and now any special day.
Or perhaps you prefer the north American term ‘vacation’ which comes from the Latin meaning freedom from obligations or duty, release.
Or maybe you think of having a ‘break’. If so, I wonder what precisely you would like to break or conversely what it is you want to fix.
Or maybe you choose to a ‘get-away’. If that is your phrase of choice, I wonder what it is that you’re wanting to get away from.
When we start looking at the language we use, it reveals something about our thought process and it reveals our attitudes and beliefs that underlie those words, perhaps personal, perhaps cultural. By observing our thoughts and our language, we can check in on how we are really feeling and we can choose to change our language to give us a different outcome.
For example, the word you use or the idea you have of a holiday may reflect ‘away from’ thinking, where we are avoiding a problem, perhaps a holiday to escape. Or it may embrace ‘towards’ thinking, where we are focusing on a goal or outcome, perhaps an adventure, a discovery, a journey.
It’s not about the words you use being right or wrong, or good or bad but whether your thinking is helpful or unhelpful to you and whether it gets you the outcome you want.
If we explore this a bit further, when you think of a holiday, it is worth noticing if you think in terms of ‘treating’ yourself or ‘spoiling’ yourself. Because ‘treat’ is doing something out of the ordinary and giving great pleasure, for example, quality time, inspiration, adventure, whereas ‘spoil’ is diminishing the value of something or harming the character of someone, for example overeating or overindulging. Which word would achieve the outcome you want?
I know when I was on holiday, I would rush around cramming everything in. I would want to do every activity, visit every place, eat every single kind of food on offer and drink every drink. That’s FOMO thinking and is coming from a scarcity perspective, that you’re missing out if you haven’t done absolutely everything. That thinking around food, can also be a reflection of having deprived yourself of food to get into your swimming costume, so you don’t have to worry now you’ve achieved your goal! Once I realised that attitude did not actually help me enjoy the experience, let alone feel relaxed and energised, I was able to shift to a more abundant and mindful perspective - just being in the moment, appreciating the sounds, sights and smells and taking them in a bit at a time and just doing what really feels right, for example just eating fresh and local foods and just small amounts rather than trying everything on the first day!
Perhaps you can just shift your thinking slightly and ask yourself what you really want from your time. For example, if your goal is to relax, have fun and to feel good, eating, drinking and sleeping by the pool may give you that short term but it won’t be what you get long-term. If you ask yourself what else would really give you that feel-good factor, that fun and relaxation, what would your day and nights look like? Take the time to think differently this year and identify what else you enjoy that lifts your energy and makes you feel ‘aaaahhh’ or ‘Yesss!’ at the end of the day.
If in the past, when you thought of being by the pool or beach you viewed it as the perfect back drop to drinking cocktails, you could just shift your mindset slightly to focus on the other opportunities it gives you. Perhaps it gives you an incredibly convenient and easy way to exercise each day, or a time to float and dream and plan and be creative, or a chance to get some Vitimin D to flood you with happy chemicals. That small shift will change your focus and your outcome.
I find the 80/20 principle helpful to making any mindset shift. Doing the eat/drink/sleep by the pool for 20% of the week and being more active the rest of the week to give me the re-energised feeling, and give me fun in a different way. I actually realised that lying around didn’t make me feel re-energised after a while.
Even consider the type of holiday you book and the values and beliefs behind that choice.
When you book all-inclusive, do you believe you have to eat and drink as much as you can to get value for money? That belief will lead you to ‘I’ve paid for it, so I’ll eat it’ thinking which will most definitely lead to overeating and to the ‘I need to go on a diet’ thinking come September.
Instead, why not consider your other underlying values for that kind of holiday. Perhaps the more important value to you is that you’ve paid for the convenience of not having to find somewhere to eat each mealtime, and not having to carry money around with you or budgeting for the week and allowing yourself to just relax and enjoy being looked after.
Or perhaps, you’ll realise you’ve changed and you’d rather have a different kind of holiday.
3 tips to make the most of your holiday and not be thinking of dieting when you return
1. Choose your words intentionally
2. Check the values and attitudes and beliefs underlying your choices and make sure they reflect your values now
3. Focus on what you want to gain - the opportunity and the outcome you want.
And perhaps you won’t ‘need to go on a diet’ in September and you may have the perfect holiday/vacation/break/ get-away for you.