Vacations are supposed to leave you refreshed, recharged, and ready to face the world again. For most people, coming home means unpacking, maybe doing a little laundry, and basking in the happy glow of new memories. I live with fibromyalgia, so the end of vacation means I need a vacation from my vacation.
I love vacations; itβs kind of a given since I grew up in Hawaii, one of the best vacation spots, in my opinion. I love that vacations give me the chance to break free from my daily routine. But it also means that because my FibromyalgiaΒ (and CFS/ME, Restless Leg Syndrome, and IBS) have further progressed, it takes a physical toll on my body.Β
This last vacation was no exception. My husband and I took our youngest to Steamboat Springs, Colorado for a soccer tournament. We would be gone for 5 days, staying in a small hotel room (the only accommodation that wouldnβt cost an arm and leg), and the journey there would take 6 hours (7 if we stopped for food and potty breaks). For me, sitting for long periods of time isnβt ideal and my body will let me know that itβs not happy.
But, we did make it in under 7 hours, even with a late start (Hubby wanted to leave at ten in the morning, but we ended up leaving a little after eleven, lol).
I didnβt take many pictures, mainly because I forgot (thanks to Fibro Fog), but I did take this one from our hotel room balcony.


Itβs called Ski Town Center right next to the gondolas that run up and down the mountain. There were a lot of restaurants, a few stores, and an area for outdoor movies and concerts.
We spent the next few days harassing Siri for directions to soccer fields, places to eat, and even a miniature golf course (gotta keep my son and his friends out of trouble in between games, ha!), and of course, sitting on the sidelines, cheering on our son in the constantly changing weather. But, despite all that, Fibromyalgia isnβt a polite travel companion.
It doesnβt care that I paced myself, took naps when I could, or made sure I packed my comfiest walking shoes. With the disrupted sleep, extra walking, fluctuating weather, and all-day activity eventually catches up to me. The day after we got home, my body was hit with full-body aches, a pounding headache, and fatigue so deep I couldnβt keep my eyes open; the indention on my side of the mattress is now deeper than itβs ever been, lol.
This is the part of travel people donβt often see. There are no Instagram pictures of me curled up under a weighted blanket, muscles burning like Iβve just run a marathon. No one takes snapshots of the heating pad I keep shifting from my shoulders to my lower back. Thereβs no scrapbook page because the mental fog made me forget to take the hundreds of photos I shouldβve taken but didnβt.
Recuperation, for me, is essential. Itβs a slow process of giving myself permission to stop. I have to trade unpacking for resting. The world can keep spinning; I need my body to catch up first.
Iβve learned that pacing myself after vacation is just as important as pacing myself during it. It means listening to my body instead of pushing through just because βvacation is overβ and life says I should get back to normal.
And hereβs the thing: recuperating is not a failure. It doesnβt mean I shouldnβt have gone. It means I chose the experience of watching my son play the game he loves,knowing Iβd have to pay for it laterβbut deciding it was worth the price. Thatβs a balance only I can decide.
Fibromyalgia may slow me down, but it doesnβt stop me from living. It simply requires me to live differently, with more intention and self-compassion. My post-vacation recovery might take days instead of hours, but every moment of rest helps in the life I want to keep livingβone trip, one flare, one quiet day at a time.





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