What’s a retreat?

A retreat is whatever you need it to be, says Caroline Sylge

A retreat is any place or space where you can rest and replenish away from the world – whatever that means to you at a particular time.

It’s a chance to step out of your daily life and get back in touch with yourself - to meet your demons, deal with your issues, heal your body, kick start your creativity - or simply to rest deeply and do absolutely nothing.

A retreat can be a beautifully-crafted, private wellbeing break led by an expert team. A life coaching or mentoring week to help you plan for a new chapter in your life or business. A cleansing, fitness-focused or adventurous yoga holiday with a like-minded group that runs on set-dates in gorgeous locations, or a traditional, monastic-style space such as an ashram or Buddhist retreat.

At other times a retreat might be a writing, painting or similarly arty escape, or a place of sanctuary where you can rest, replenish, reconsider and renew when you need to. It could be full-blown destination spa with rituals, medical attention and state of the art facilities. But equally your retreat of the moment could simply be a cabin in the woods or a boutique bolthole where you can relax and recharge.

Retreating will mean different things to different people at different life stages.

What will your next retreat be?

Caroline Sylge

Caroline Sylge is a poet, author and journalist and a trusted expert on retreats and retreating. She is the founder of retreat platform queenofretreats.com, powered by The Global Retreat Company. The author of How To Retreat (Penguin Random House) and of healthy travel guidebooks Body & Soul Escapes and Body & Soul Escapes: Britain & Ireland (Footprint Books). A retreat-focused journalist whose credits include The Guardian, The Times, The Telegraph, Condé Nast Traveller and National Geographic. A Carcanet-published poet, and a judge for the British Book Awards. Caroline has an MA in English from the University of Sussex, and a First Class BA in English from the University of Birmingham. She lives in Devon, England, with her husband and daughter.

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