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Around The World With Rob

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Mental Health, Loneliness & Resilience | Around the World with Rob

MODULE 5 · MINDFUL MILES

Mental Health, Loneliness & Resilience

Look, most days travel feels like magic. But some days — especially the long, quiet ones far from everyone who knows your story — it can feel really heavy. I’ve been there. This lesson is the stuff I wish someone had handed me early on: simple, kind ways to look after your head and heart when you’re on the other side of the world.

We’ll walk through an easy escalation ladder: notice what’s happening → small resets → reach out → get proper support if needed. Plus the little daily moves that have kept me (and a lot of other long-term travelers) steady.

Best for: solo travelers, long-haul trips, anyone who’s ever felt “off” far from home Time: ~16 min Last updated:

Quick Overview: it’s okay to not feel okay

Travel throws a lot at you — new smells, new faces, new everything. Sometimes your nervous system just says “whoa, slow down.” The goal isn’t to stay upbeat 24/7. It’s to notice when things feel heavier than usual, do something gentle about it, and know exactly when to ask for a hand.

Monitor

A bit flat or homesick, but still moving through the day and it’s easing.

Reset / connect

Feeling stuck, irritable, or lonely for a few days straight.

Get help

Things feel dark, scary, or unsafe — that’s when we bring in backup.

Warm Truth: Feeling low doesn’t mean the trip is failing or you’re failing. It just means you’re human in an unusual situation. That’s all.

The escalation ladder (the one I actually use myself)

I don’t panic on a bad day anymore. I just check the trend. If it’s not turning around after a gentle nudge or two, I move up a step. Solo? I give myself less time before reaching out.

1

Monitor & be kind to yourself

  • You’re a little sad, tired, or missing home — normal after a big move or long stretch alone.
  • It’s easing with sleep, food, or a walk.
  • You’re still safe and functional.
2

Active reset

  • Low mood or edginess hanging around for 2–3 days.
  • Try one of the quick resets below, move your body, talk to someone.
  • Check in again tomorrow — better? Great. Same or worse? Next step.
3

Reach out

  • Feeling really isolated, anxious, or flat for longer.
  • Call a friend who gets you, join a traveler meetup, message someone back home.
  • Sometimes just saying it out loud lifts half the weight.
4

Professional support

  • Dark thoughts, panic that won’t ease, feeling unsafe in your own head.
  • Teletherapy, hotline, or local help — whatever is fastest and feels safest.
  • Your trip can wait. You come first.
FYI: What feels like “just culture shock” can sometimes be the start of something heavier. Trust how you feel more than the label.

Red flags — the “don’t wait, okay?” list

These are the moments I tell myself (and now tell you): stop negotiating with this. Get help right away. You’re not overreacting — you’re protecting yourself.

No BS: act now

  • Thoughts of hurting yourself or not wanting to be here anymore
  • Panic so strong you can’t breathe or think straight
  • Feeling completely detached from reality
  • Mood swinging so hard it’s scary or dangerous

Consideration: reach out soon

  • Hopelessness or emptiness that’s lasting days
  • Can’t eat, sleep, or do basic things despite trying
  • Anxiety shutting down your ability to function
  • Completely pulling away from everyone
Truth: Waiting until you’re “really bad” usually makes recovery take longer. A quick call or session now can save weeks of pain.

Loneliness toolkit — because I’ve sat in too many quiet hotel rooms

The first few times it hit me hard I felt embarrassed — “I chose this life, why am I lonely?” Then I realised it’s not about being alone; it’s about feeling unseen. Here’s what actually helps.

Easy first steps

Send a voice note to someone who knows your laugh. Join one casual group thing (cooking class, walking tour, hostel movie night).

Internal lifelines

Say out loud: “This is loneliness, not proof I’m doing it wrong.” Schedule a call in the next few days so you have something to look forward to.

Avoid the trap

Don’t doom-scroll Instagram comparing your real day to everyone’s highlight reel. It makes everything feel worse.

Warm Truth: You can love the road with your whole heart and still miss real hugs and inside jokes. Both feelings get to exist.

Daily resets — the 5–20 min moves that bring me back

These aren’t fancy. They’re just reliable. I do versions of them in hostels, Airbnbs, buses — anywhere.

5-min reset

Box breathing (4 in, 4 hold, 4 out, 4 hold), splash cold water on your face, stretch like a cat.

15-min reset

Walk without your phone, record a voice note saying exactly how you feel, call someone who won’t try to “fix” it.

30-min reset

Sit in a café with a notebook, do a short workout, plan one tiny thing tomorrow that sounds nice.

Things to Know: The point isn’t to feel instantly happy. It’s to stop the spiral so you can think clearly again.

Little routines that keep me steady no matter where I wake up

Freedom is great until there’s zero structure and your brain starts spinning. These small anchors changed everything for me.

Morning

Coffee or tea outside if possible, 5 minutes of stretching, quick “what’s one nice thing today?” thought.

Evening

No screens 30–60 min before bed, write or say one high and one low from the day.

Weekly

Check in: “How’s my energy? Do I need slower days or more people time?” Adjust without guilt.

My go-to three-sentence check-in

  • “Right now I’m feeling ___ because ___.”
  • “The best part of today was ___.”
  • “Tomorrow I’m going to try ___ to feel a bit better.”
Warm Truth: Some days the routine is just brushing your teeth and getting out of bed. That still counts. Be proud of it.

Staying close to people — without forcing it

You don’t need a new best friend in every city. You need a few solid threads back home and the occasional warm human moment on the road. Here’s what works.

Things that help me

  • Voice notes > typing. Hearing someone’s voice feels like a hug.
  • Schedule one call a week with a person who really knows you.
  • Say yes to one low-pressure social thing every few days (even if it’s just coffee with a hostel mate).

What I avoid

  • Over-scheduling video calls that leave me more drained.
  • Comparing my messy real life to polished feeds.
  • Forcing “deep” chats when I’m not ready.
No BS: It’s okay if some weeks you want more solitude. Listen to what you actually need, not what you think a “good traveler” should do.

When (and how) to get professional help abroad

I used to think asking for help meant I’d failed at travel. Now I see it as one of the smartest things you can do to keep going longer and happier.

Prep before you need it

  • Check if your travel insurance covers teletherapy.
  • Have apps like BetterHelp, Talkspace, or local English-speaking options saved.
  • Know your country’s emergency hotline numbers (many have English lines).

When it’s time

  • Call a 24/7 hotline first if you’re in crisis — no judgement, just someone to listen.
  • Book one session even if you’re “not sure” — worst case you feel heard.
  • Save notes from sessions so you can pick up again wherever you are next.
Consideration: Language barrier? Many therapists now offer sessions in English or use translation tools. You deserve to be understood.

FINAL LESSON · MODULE 5

You did it — Module 5 complete!

You now have tools for the physical side and the emotional side of long-term travel. That’s huge. Next up in Module 6 we talk travel styles (slow, fast, solo, group) and real ways to work or volunteer on the road so this lifestyle can fit *you* for as long as you want.

FAQ — questions I get asked a lot

How long is “normal” loneliness supposed to last?

A couple of days after arriving somewhere new is super common. If it’s still heavy after a week of trying small connection moves, that’s your cue to reach out or slow down a bit.

Can I really get decent therapy if I don’t speak the local language?

Absolutely. English-speaking therapists are easier to find than ever — especially online or in bigger cities. Start with apps or ask in expat Facebook groups.

What if my insurance doesn’t cover mental health?

Look for low-cost or sliding-scale options online, use free hotlines when you need to talk right away, and lean hard on journaling and movement in the meantime. Every bit helps.

How do I get back on track after a really rough day?

Start tiny. One walk. One kind message to yourself. One thing you enjoy eating. Small wins stack up faster than you think.

Let’s talk

What’s one small thing that’s helped you feel less alone or more grounded while traveling? Drop it below — someone else might need to hear exactly that today.