The Art of Mindful Travel: Wisdom from My Camino de Santiago Retreat Guests

Essential Tips from Experienced Travellers

The journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step—and a bit of preparation. Whether you’re joining one of my Camino de Santiago walking retreats or embarking on another adventure, the difference between a challenging ordeal and a transformative experience often lies in your approach. After decades of hosting retreats, I’ve gathered my retreat guests’ insights to help you travel not just with your feet, but with your heart and mind fully present:

Patience is an essential traveller’s virtue

When you are travelling, whether it is from London to Paris or London to Kathmandu, having loads of patience to trot out when needed can make your journey much more comfortable. Travelling calls for barrels full of patience, especially at this time of the year. If patience is not your thing, avoid travelling at peak times, as in over Christmas. We have given up trying to get to our family in the southern hemisphere for Christmas. We go a month later, during the worst of our winter, which means tickets are at half the price. If you do have to travel and things go wrong, take a deep breath and then tackle problems as creatively as possible.

Don’t take anything too seriously

The ability to laugh and to laugh at yourself while travelling can also make the whole experience more enjoyable. On the flight, watch the in-flight comedy. Or read a funny book. Think of a joke or a situation you found yourself in that made you laugh. Smile to yourself. Look at challenging events from the funny perspective. Nurture your sense of humour and keep it close at hand when travelling.

Keep your valuables safe while you travel

Losing your camera is one thing.

Losing your luggage is another.

Losing your wallet is annoying.

Losing your passport/driver’s license/health insurance card is seriously annoying.

Losing your phone is extremely annoying.

Losing your laptop, where you have scanned copies of all the above, is in a different league altogether.

To avoid losing your mind, keep tabs on your valuables while you are travelling. Back everything on your laptop/phone up (including emergency/contact phone numbers) on an external hard drive as well as online for easy access in case of need.

Hunt and capture memories

We now have digital cameras. Don’t forget to take lots of photos – you can always delete the less successful ones later. It is also a great way to keep a travelling diary, especially if you set the camera to imprint the date unobtrusively on each photo. Keep notes – a sentence or two will often suffice to re-ignite a memory later. As you may know, I am a great fan of journaling, and although while on holiday one may not have much time to write at length, a few sentences a day in a travelling journal can bring back memories as sharp as if it all happened yesterday many years later. Photos you can also share with others, especially useful if you are travelling alone and you want to reassure and share your experiences with loved ones at home. A picture often speaks more than a thousand words and it is important to stay in touch.

Always pack earplugs and keep them within easy reach

Essential for the phantom crying baby on the plane, for ignoring the noisily celebrating and completely drunk returning stag/hen party participants at the next restaurant table in the waiting lounge or the explosive snorer in the room four doors down the corridor, for excluding the deafening traffic noise while you are transferring from one airport to another, for obliterating the passenger in the seat next to you on the plane with verbal diarrhea…you get the idea.

Go out and meet the locals

Round here, a short stroll up the road will do the trick. You will come across Mme D’Angle mowing her front lawn, always ready to switch the machine off for a quick chat. Don’t worry if your French is limited, she is good at communicating with hand signals and body language. A bit further you will meet up with the vineyard workers having a quick restorative under a huge oak tree, always willing to share their tipple and talk about the state of agriculture in this country. Yet a bit further you may meet Mme Pontier, taking her dog for a walk to her husband’s grave in the village cemetery – if you want to know anything about the history (or the hottest village gossip) of the region, stop and ask after her health. Small but potent ways to enrich your holiday experience…and it provides the locals with new stories.

When travelling, keep an open mind

So they do things differently in this country (sometimes their way of doing resembles nothing you have ever come across in your life before). That’s OK. You are also here to learn from new experiences, and maybe even find a better way of doing something. If their way of doing seems completely idiotic to you, ask them why they are doing it this way. Ask nicely and then listen carefully. Put yourself in their shoes for a moment. Maybe from their perspective, their way of doing is perfectly natural, obvious and logical. You do not have to agree, just see if you can learn something. Leave your comfort zone and keep an open mind. Try new things, new ways of doing. Try new food. New wine. Chances are you will find new insight and understanding. New possibilities and opportunities. New friendships.

Be prepared for all eventualities

In the very first instance, look after yourself physically. Be careful of the sun, especially here in the south of France, when midsummer over midday you can get sunstroke from spending an hour or two outside. Wear sunglasses, wear a hat, drench yourself in suntan lotion. Make sure that the water from the tap is safe and if not, remember to keep your mouth closed when you are showering. Not all spring water is safe to drink either – I get our spring water tested once a year to make sure it is. DO bring all your regular medication with you and bring enough to last the whole holiday. Yes, there are two pharmacies in the village 3 km from here, but it may be difficult to get hold of the French alternative of what you are taking any time soon. Bring emergency meds: anti-heartburn, anti-diarrhea, anti-pain, anti-allergy stuff, that sort of thing. Last but not least, make sure you have appropriate travel insurance. If you are from the UK, an EHIC card is absolutely essential.

When you are on holiday, wake up early

You usually sleep in as late as possible on holiday to catch up on your well-deserved sleep. I perfectly understand and that is why if you are on one of my retreats, you do not have to be coffeed-up and corpus mentis before 10:00. If you could, though, maybe just one day during your stay, rise with sunrise you may discover a whole new world up to now unexplored. Grab your camera before you venture out, now is the best light for memory-firing pictures. Stand for a while by the horses, quietly munching on their hay, go for a brisk walk through the vineyards or maybe you would like to join the guests who are doing slow stretching exercises on the lawn…

When you are on holiday, help

Look at what is happening around you. Maybe there is something you can do to help? I know you paid for this holiday and that you fully intend to get full value for your money. Of course, that is important. Just entertain the thought for a while. Even when on holiday, when you give, you receive so much more. I never expect my guests to do anything, they are here to relax and enjoy their holiday. But the ones who have stolen my heart and became life-long friends were the ones who have offered to help clear the table, insisted on doing the washing up, got up early to help feed the horses, bought an extra bottle of wine for dinner when they go wine tasting…I have learnt this precious lesson from my guests and I now help whenever I can while I am on holiday. I have made many new friends this way and find it a very rewarding experience.

The Journey Continues Long After You Returned Home

The most valuable souvenirs from any journey aren’t the trinkets that gather dust on your shelves, but the moments that changed you—the sunrise that took your breath away, the unexpected kindness of a stranger, the challenge that revealed your own resilience.

These travel tips aren’t just about making your journey smoother (though they will), but about creating space for those transformative moments to happen. On the Camino de Santiago, as in life, the path itself teaches us as much as the destination. The blisters heal, the sunburn fades, but the stories and insights you gather along the way become part of who you are.

P.S. Ready to turn your next trip into a soul-stirring adventure?

If you’re craving more than just a change of scenery—if you’re longing for clarity, inspiration, and a deeper connection with yourself and with nature—join us on a Camino de Santiago walking retreat in the southwest of France – designed for thoughtful travellers ready to reflect, reset, and rediscover what really matters. Expect beautiful scenery, heartfelt conversations, personal breakthroughs, and plenty of space for introspection (and belly laughs).

Twice a month, March to December.
Small groups, big transformations.

Find out more.

10 Powerful Life Lessons Learned While Walking the Camino de Santiago a free guide filled with 10 not just “quaint anecdotes” or Instagram-worthy moments (though there are plenty of those) but real transformations from real people who walked the same insight-giving trail you might want to walk one day walk – Subscribe to the Savoir Vivre Vignettes newsletter to Download the Guide

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“I am an experienced medical doctor – MBChB, MRCGP, NLP master pract cert, Transformational Life Coach (dip.) Life Story Coach (cert.) Counselling (cert.) Med Hypnotherapy (dip.) and EAGALA (cert.) I may have an impressive number of letters after my name, and more than three decades of professional experience, but what qualifies me to excel at what I do is my intuitive understanding of my clients’ difficulties and my extensive personal experience of managing major life changes using strategies I developed over many years” Dr M Montagu

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