Travel used to throw me off completely.
Different schedule. Airport food. Client dinners. Late nights. Less sleep. More salt. More wine. And by the time I got home, I felt inflamed, exhausted, and like I needed a full reset.
Now I approach travel differently.
Not with restriction. Not with obsession.
With intention.
Here’s exactly what I did on my most recent trip to stay aligned while still enjoying the experience.
Hydration Is My Anchor
Air travel alone can dehydrate you fast. Add restaurant food and long days, and it’s a recipe for puffiness and fatigue.
I packed my electrolytes and sipped them on the plane. I also had another serving at the end of each night before bed.
It helped with:
Energy levels Next-morning recovery Reducing bloating Better sleep
This is one of the simplest things I do — and one of the most impactful.
I Limited Alcohol (But Didn’t Eliminate It)
At dinner, I had one glass of wine.
That was my boundary.
No “I’m traveling so it doesn’t count.”
No guilt either.
One glass felt balanced and intentional. Enough to enjoy the social aspect, not enough to derail my sleep or how I felt the next day.
I Ate What I Wanted — Strategically
I enjoyed the food. Fully.
But I built my plates intentionally:
Prioritized protein Added salad or vegetables Kept portions moderate
I minimized heavier starches like potatoes and rice simply because I was sitting in meetings most of the day and didn’t need a big carb load.
Did I have dessert? Yes.
Did I eat breakfast croissants? Also yes.
I just didn’t overdo it.
The difference isn’t deprivation. It’s awareness.
I Kept My Morning Routine
This was the biggest win.
I brought:
Pre-workout Protein powder Creatine Resistance bands A workout outfit
Even if I didn’t have access to a full gym, I did Pilates and resistance band workouts in my room.
Not to “burn off” food.
To stay grounded.
When I move first thing in the morning, I think clearer. I make better choices. I feel like myself.
Travel doesn’t have to mean abandoning your standards.
I Focused on Recovery
Hotel air and restaurant sodium are not subtle.
I brought my quartz roller, kept it in the mini fridge, and used it morning and night to help reduce facial puffiness.
It’s a small ritual, but it made me feel refreshed and put together — especially during long days of meetings and networking.
The Bigger Shift: No All-or-Nothing Thinking
This is what truly changed everything.
I didn’t aim to be perfect.
I didn’t use travel as an excuse.
I aimed to stay steady.
When you remove the “I’ll start over Monday” mindset, travel becomes just another environment — not a setback.
And honestly? There’s something powerful about coming home feeling proud of how you showed up.

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