Tag Archives: Global Wellness Institute

Health & Wellness Offerings Expand in Response to Exploding Demand by Travelers

The satisfaction of having ascended the 14,000-ft high Dead Woman’s Pass on Alpaca Expeditions’ four-day Inca Trail hike to Machu Picchu © Karen Rubin/goingplacesfarandnear.com

By Karen Rubin, Travel Features Syndicate, goingplacesfarandnear.com

Health and wellness, growing as part of everyday life, have become increasingly integrated into hospitality, travel and tourism behaviors. Wellness Tourism globally has grown to be worth $651 billion annually (out of a $5.6 trillion global wellness economy) and is forecasted to grow annually by an average of 16.6% through 2027. 

We used to think of “wellness” mainly in terms of spa retreats, but health and wellness now is figures into everything from the motivation to travel and choices of destinations, accommodations, activities and experiences, even decisions about when to travel.

Venice is literally sinking with climate change and sea level rise. Setting out platforms for tourists to walk at St. Marks Square has become routine © Karen Rubin/goingplacesfarandnear.com

Take climate change, for instance. In light of record heat waves, wildfires, flooding, people are choosing their destinations and seasons to travel with more care. “Cool-cations” is one of the emerging new trends in travel – choosing places like Scotland and Quebec for summer holidays, trading cities for mountains, theme parks for dude ranches. There is also an awareness of the fragility of bucket-list destinations and sights like Venice (sinking), islands like the Galapagos and the Maldives (just a foot above sea level), the Great Barrier Reef (coral bleaching), the Dead Sea and the Great Salt Lake (evaporating), even the Statue of Liberty in New York harbor is on the endangered list.

Clouds of smoke billow over the Acropolis from wildfires just outside Athens © Laini Miranda/goingplacesfarandnear.com

Travelers are also seeking out opportunities to be active outdoors instead of passive sightseers – biking, kayaking, paddleboarding, pickleball, hiking – that are physical, engaging, but also incorporate inner peace. Pilgrimages which involve long walks to places that have spiritual meaning fit the bill of combining physical and emotional benefit, as do bike trips

The wellness motif also figures into a desire for responsible and sustainable travel, where the benefits are mutual for the traveler – providing mental, physical and emotional wellbeing – and the local regional and urban economies that sustain people in their communities and preserve heritage and conserve environment for future generations.

The Global Wellness Institute’s  Tourism Initiative team reported on these emerging wellness travel trends. 

Climate Adaptive Wellness

Travelers are adapting to climate change and so is the wellness industry along with city planners, Jane Kitchen, editor-at-large of Spa Business, reports.

The impacts are seen in architecture and design: instead of relying on air-conditioning which contributes to climate change, architects and designers are looking at new solutions as well as looking back at ancient ways to cool buildings. More rooftop and vertical gardens, more greenspace, new building materials, heat resilient design incorporated into buildings whether new tech or going back to 1000-year old building techniques – like were used in the Middle East before electricity and air conditioning.

Urban planners are becoming alarmed about the public health dangers of heat for residents as well as visitors who are beginning to shun popular cities like Paris and Athens (experiencing wildfires as we write this) in summer.

Paris spent $1 billion to clean up the Seine so it could accommodate swimming, and provides misting stations and water fountains to keep residents and travelers comfortable during the hot summer © Karen Rubin/goingplacesfarandnear.com

The city of Miami created a new position of Chief Heat Officer with Los Angeles, Melbourne, and Athens following suit. Cities are installing cooling stations (like Paris), cleaning up rivers so people can do wild swimming (like Paris which spent $1 billion to clean the Seine), planting more greenery, even using greenery on buildings (like Friedensreich Hundertwasser’s Green Citadel of Magdeburg, Germany, an apartment building and hotel that is literally a work of art and model for new urban design and liveability.

Friedensreich Hundertwasser’s Green Citadel of Magdeburg, Germany, an apartment building and hotel  is literally a work of art and model for new urban design and liveability © Karen Rubin/goingplacesfarandnear.com

Smart tech will also be summoned to help solve the heat crisis – like “cooling clothes – initially for workers that need to work outside, but eventually, becoming mainstream for everyday and for travel. Among the new technologies: inks in fabrics that keep cooler in summer, warmer in winter; therma adaptive textiles; wearable patches that draw heat from body and clothing embedded with smart sensors if at risk of heat stress.

Spa and wellness travel is also adapting with new, fun programs such as nighttime wellness and spa treatments, night hikes and star gazing  which have a wellness component but take place in evening when it is cooler; ice baths; and climate adaptive beauty and geo-skin care, based on where you are and the weather connections

Power of Pilgrimage

The physical, emotional and spiritual satisfaction of hiking Alpaca Expeditions’ four-day Inca Trail hike to Machu Picchu © Karen Rubin/goingplacesfarandnear.com

Journalist Eric Wilson found a “silver lining of the pandemic: people discovered the benefits of walking and walking enthusiasts discovered the benefits of exploring the ancient pilgrimage trails around the world. A record number of trekkers sought out hikes infused with cultural heritage across Asia, Europe, and the Americas (my four-day Inca Trail Trek fits neatly into that trend). A record 500,000 completed the Santiago Pilgrimage Trail in Spain – most who chose the experience not so much in pursuit of faith but for physical and spiritual wellness.

Alpaca Expeditions’ four-day Inca Trail hiking/camping adventure hits on many of the trends in wellness travel: desire for “slow-travel” walks/pilgrimage that activate physical, emotional, spiritual cylinders of well-being, an impromptu yoga session to rejuvenate after ascending the 14,000-ft high peak, responsible/sustainable/eco-friendly travel which mutually benefits travelers and community © Karen Rubin/goingplacesfarandnear.com
 

The trend has impacted a rejuvenation of trails globally to accommodate scores of new, modern pilgrims in “buzzy new destinations” like Sri Lanka, Bhutan, India, Italy and Japan. Governments, interested in promoting holistic tourism, have invested in extensive restorations of these trails – Bhutan opened a 250-mile Trans Bhutan Trail. Walk Japan reported such a surge in demand, there were not enough roadside inns or monks quarters to accommodate the travelers. Wukalina Walk, a multi-award winning Indigenous/Palawa-owned tourism experience, is led by Aboriginal guides who provide a rare window into Tasmania/lutruwita’s aboriginal culture (discoveraboriginalexperiences.com).

Savvy resorts are responding to the rising interest by incorporating a profound version of slow travel movement, linking to ancient pilgrimage trails and offering wellness programs including meditation.

“Pilgrimage is metaphor for the path to enlightenment, the slowest most meditative form of travel, where you experience unexpected encounters with strangers, gain a deeper perspective of place, where question our place in the world.” (I must confess these thoughts came to me on my Inca Trail trek.)

Biking railtrails like the Mickelson Trail in South Dakota with Wilderness Voyageurs has evoke physical, emotional, spiritual and social benefits, as well as a direct connection to engage directly with local people and the environment © Karen Rubin/goingplacesfarandnear.com

Surging popularity, availability of bike tours: For much the same reason as pilgrimage and walking trips, biking tours are another “slow form” of self-propelled travel experiencing explosive growth in interest and availability. Bike tours similarly evoke physical, emotional, spiritual and social benefits, as well as a direct connection to engage directly with local people and the environment, albeit at a slightly faster pace. And e-bikes now extend a cyclists’ longevity in the saddle,and take away anxiety over being able to handle the hills or the miles. Among the operators offering guided and self-guided itineraries on rail trails around the country and the world (where you are most likely to achieve that level of serenity and inner dialogue because you are not worrying about car traffic): Discovery Bicycle Tours (discoverybicycletours.com); Wilderness Voyageurs (Wilderness-Voyageurs.com); Backroads (backroads.com); VBT Bicycling Vacations (vbt.com) and Boat Bike Tours (boatbiketours.com). Also see Rails to Trails Conservancy (railstotrails.org) and the Adventure Cycling Association (adventurecycling.org).

Wellness holidays with kids are about enrichment

A nighttime nature walk entrances young people at the Tenaya Lodge, Fish Camp, California, at the gateway to Yosemite National Park © Karen Rubin/goingplacesfarandnear.com

Families increasingly value travel experiences that support their child’s wellbeing by expanding their education, personal development and worldview. These trips go beyond the traditional family vacation aimed at entertainment or vegging out on a beach and focus instead on immersive experiences that combine fun with learning. Examples include creative and hands-on workshops that focus on local traditions and foods, learning about local biodiversity and marine life conservation as well as personal growth elements that expose children to unexpected situations, teaching them to adapt to new environments and overcome challenges. Gleneagles Hotel in Scotland offers outdoor nature led activities for children while newcomer, Jayasom’s Family Wellness offers family counseling, enrichment activities, virtual reality and outdoor wellbeing excursions including a large hydrotherapy space that families can enter together. Austria’s Reiters Finest Family hosts sustainable family wellness holidays in Bad Tatzmannsdorf, a resort featuring 125 hectares of outdoor space, 400 animals for farm adventures as well as thermal waters, and a health and longevity center that families can enjoy together. 

Sports is playing a bigger role in hospitality  

Playing pickleball on a court on a farm in Sonoma, California © Karen Rubin/goingplacesfarandnear.com

Sports related travel accounted for 66 million room stays and generated $49 billion in 2021, reported Patricia Ladis of WiseBody Physical Therapy. Enthusiasts are traveling to where they can train or improve their skills, engage in the sport (golf, tennis have long been popular but now mountain biking, cycling, rock climbing, pickleball are among the sports that are motivating travel) as well as to participate or spectate in competitions and tournaments as grand as the Olympics but as basic as a child’s hockey tourney.

People are not only traveling to engage or train in a sport, but for rehabilitation treatments and therapies. SIRO Hotels is one of first luxury hotels to be designed around health, wellness, and recovery. Its new SIRO One Za’abeel Hotel in Dubai delivers a complete experience under one roof, with rooms designed to combat jet lag, 2,000 sq m of fitness and recovery facilities with cutting-edge treatments, personalized nutritional guidance, diverse training options. Dedicated health resorts like Chenot Weggis Palace in Switzerland offer wellness travelers the opportunity to spend a week recharging with the top technologies on hand to future proof your health and wellbeing.  

In Search of Calm

Mental wellness as a travel trend has been gaining significant traction over the past few years, reflecting a broader societal shift towards valuing mental health and self-care. Wellness retreats integrate yoga, breath work, meditation. What is new are the more intensive therapy retreats. For example, equine therapy (with horses) is offered at  Gwinganna Lifestyle Retreat in Australia and NIHI Sumba in Indonesia, Re-wilding retreats that immerse into natural settings to support mental wellbeing are popular across the globe: properties like The Dreaming, in the heart of Wales and AroHa in New Zealand.

Finding calm by wild camping in a Moterra campervan in Nevada © Eric Leiberman/goingplacesfarandnear.com

This interest in seeking out the wild – getting off the beaten track – to find calm and mental wellbeing is facilitated by the rising availability of luxury campervans, equipped with water, solar-powered batteries, that enable wild camping with maximum calm and minimum stress. Among the companies: Moterra Campervans (gomoterra.com), Blacksford RV (blacksford.com), and Roadsurfer (roadsurfer.com)

Diagnostic Boom as Wellness Travelers Look to Prevention, Longevity   

Living longer is one goal of health-and-wellness travelers, but so is living well. There is recognition that quality of life is as important as quantity. Wellness travelers are now seeking out tailored and proactive health approaches, prompting many health and wellness operators to enhance their offerings with comprehensive diagnostic assessments alongside traditional wellness activities. At Canyon Ranch in Tucson, Arizona, you can undergo thorough health evaluations encompassing genetic testing, preventive diagnostics, body composition analysis, and metabolic assessments. The new Longevity Spa at Hotel, Portrait Milano, provides cutting-edge diagnostics like DNA testing and Longevity Molecular Profile, complemented by Integrative Wellness solutions and nutrition plans. KĒPOS by Goco at Daios Cove in Crete, Greece, features diagnostic services such as Metabolic Biometrics and Epigenetics testing alongside wellness programs and spa offerings.

“These offerings empower individuals to gain profound insights into their health status and make informed lifestyle choices while indulging in the rejuvenating benefits of travel. As travelers increasingly prioritize preventive healthcare and holistic well-being, the diagnostic booms in wellness travel are set to continue to reshape the tourism industry by seamlessly blending medical expertise with luxury hospitality,” GWI’s Wellness Tourism Initiative Trends for 2024 notes. 

Art and Wellness: A Perfect Pairing   

Finding harmony in nature and art at Red Reflet Ranch, Wyoming © Karen Rubin/goingplacesfarandnear.com

An emerging trend integrating art and wellness signifies a harmonious fusion of creative expression and holistic well-being, and is resulting in immersive art-centric activities, therapies and experiences that nourish both the body and the soul. Wellness hospitality operators like Como Shambhala Estate in Bali and Miraval in Arizona along with many small artisans and practitioners globally are hosting wellness retreats that blend yoga and meditation with artistic workshops encouraging guests to explore their inner creativity as a pathway to self-discovery and relaxation, inspiration and rejuvenation.  

Seeking Out Cultural Traditions and Healing

Indigenous healing has gained prominence as part of the broader trend towards holistic wellness and the search for authentic, transformative experiences. These experiences draw on the wisdom and practices of indigenous cultures around the world, offering healing techniques that have been passed down through generations. The interest in and drive behind these retreats are linked to an acknowledgement of the benefits of indigenous healing practices, a holistic approach and reconnection with the land.

Wukalina Walk, a multi-award winning Indigenous/Palawa-owned tourism experience, is led by Aboriginal guides who provide a rare window into Tasmania/lutruwita’s aboriginal culture (photo by Jillian Mundy)

 At Wai Ariki Hot Springs, in Rotorua New Zealand you can discover the ancient healing methods of these indigenous cultures, from the deeply cultural touch of mirri mirri or romi romi massage to the revitalizing power of blessed stones and herbal remedies – each experience incorporates local healers and wellness practitioners, herbal medicine practice and ceremonies that honor the community and the land. Asian traditional therapies and medicine are growing in popularity for the wellness traveler around the globe. Traditional Thai, Chinese & Ayurvedic Medicinal offerings encompass rich diagnostic protocols, herbal formulas, and treatment techniques as part of the guest experience. 

Quest for a Good Night’s Sleep

Sleep tourism is emerging as a trend catering to the growing recognition of the importance of quality sleep for overall health and well-being; travelers are seeking out diagnosis, prescriptions and coaching to improve their sleep. RAKxa Integrative wellness retreat in Thailand, offers a Thai Deep Sleep & Skin Radiant Therapy, which focuses on enhancing sleep quality, integrating traditional Thai Medicine and CBD oils. At the Longevity Hub By Clinique La Prairie in Bangkok visitors are offered Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy.   

More information at globalwellnessinstitute.org.

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© 2024 Travel Features Syndicate, a division of Workstyles, Inc. All rights reserved. Visit goingplacesfarandnear.com and travelwritersmagazine.com/TravelFeaturesSyndicate/. Blogging at goingplacesnearandfar.wordpress.com and moralcompasstravel.info. Visit instagram.com/going_places_far_and_near and instagram.com/bigbackpacktraveler/ Send comments or questions to [email protected]. Tweet @TravelFeatures. ‘Like’ us at facebook.com/NewsPhotoFeatures 

Wellness & Travel, the Perfect Synergy

The quest for wellness is becoming ubiquitous, especially for travelers who seek out immersive nature and cultural experiences. Having just summated the 14,000-foot high Dead Woman’s Pass on Day 2 of Alpaca Expeditions’ four-day Inca Trail trek to Machu Picchu, one of our group leads yoga stretches © Karen Rubin/goingplacesfarandnear.com

Edited by Karen Rubin, Travel Features Syndicate, goingplacesfarandnear.com

Wellness travel is among the leading travel trends for 2023, as it has been for several years. But when the very act of breaking away from daily irritants, giving oneself the opportunity to rest, renew, recharge, revitalize, isn’t all travel wellness? The trend refers to the fact that people are traveling with greater intention to improve their physical, mental, emotional, even spiritual well-being.

It could be a visit to a wellness retreat or spa. But it could also be a hiking, biking, rafting, camping trip that gets you out into nature, pure air, with some physical exertion. It can be an itinerary that is spiritually uplifting or intellectually fulfilling, of doing something you love or even finding love. It could be travel that brings family and friends together, forging bonds and lifelong memories that also contribute to wellness, or even making new friends to conquer loneliness or isolation. Travel, at its essential core, is inevitably about life-enhancing, even life-changing experience. What’s new is people intentionally seeking out such experiences – and that the industry, from tour companies to hotels, cruiselines to destinations, from festivals and events to attractions – are tailoring their offerings to cater to the quest for wellness.

Not only does wellness impact how, where and why people travel, but through lifestyle changes, wellness also impacts longevity and financial security – which when you think about it, expands the market for travel with time, money and physical ability.

These themes emerged in the Global Wellness Summit’s report, “12 Wellness Trends for 2023” with implications of how travel, hospitality, even urban design, workplace policies (vacations are essential to recharge), government planning are accommodating. Among the key findings, as reported by the researchers:

WELLNESS + TRAVEL: From Global Smorgasbord to Hyper-Indigenous

By Elaine Glusac

Wellness and wellness tourism have long resembled Disney’s “It’s a Small World”: buffets of global experiences typically divorced from place. Yoga, born in India, is ubiquitous worldwide; ayahuasca retreats have departed their Amazonian homelands; you can get a Hawaiian Lomi Lomi massage in Dubai.

But with a new critique of wellness as a profound cultural appropriator, a rising social justice movement, and greater emphasis on authenticity, travelers are now seeking much deeper cultural experiences and showing interest in going to the source of ancient healing and knowledge to learn how they care for the land and for themselves. Indigenous travel and going to the cultural source for wellness is our travel trend for 2023.

There interest not only in going back to the origin places for wellness programs, but also to immerse in culture and heritage, such as in the Sacred Valley of Peru © Karen Rubin/goingplacesfarandnear.com

Community-led Indigenous travel offerings are surgingfrom the boreal forests of Canada to the Australian Outbackand speak deeply to travelers seeking inclusive, sustainable and regenerative travel experiences. The fast-mounting interest in original cultures includes Indigenous wellness practices, from purification ceremonies to food and nutrition.

Concurrently, culturally-rooted wellness experiences are booming globally and inspiring travelers to go to the original wellspring for authenticity. In Japan, traditional ryokans, or hot springs inns, are having an incredible renaissance as nature-based experiences that shift with the seasons. Resorts are exploring new menus of from-the-source wellness, whether traditional Arabic and Islamic medicine in the Middle East or Druidry in England. India, which gave the wellness world yoga, is poised to lure travelers back to the source with an upcoming center for traditional medicine partnered by the World Health Organization.

[Canada has really taken the lead to support tourism enterprises among its indigenous populations, under the umbrella of Indigenous Tourism Association (ITAC). In British Columbia, where there are 204 indigenous communities, a tourism development organization IndigenousBC.com is an excellent website to plan visits. Many of the Canadian indigenous communities offer wellness programs.

Also Ponant Cruises has introduced a series of programs that feature encounters with indigenous people, including the Inuit in Greenland, the Emberas in panama, Papuans in Papua New Guinea, us.ponant.com]

WELLNESS + SPORTS: New Business Models for Hospitality

By Lisa Starr

Savvy hospitality brands are responding to demands from wellness-focused clients looking beyond the basement gym, in search of pro-athlete-level equipment, fitness classes and wellness programming, whenever and wherever they travel. Some hotel brands are even creating facilities that cater to entire amateur or professional sports teams, expanding the function of the hotel and ensuring professional quality for the rest of us. We predict businesses that support this trend will become the go-to brands for future generations.

The ubiquity of the wellness-focused lifestyles of elite and professional athletes are fueling this trend and increasing demand for pro-level wellness at hotels and resorts. Hospitality brands like Kerzner International Holdings, owner of the Atlantis Resort and One&Only Resorts, are responding to the public preoccupation with sports with new concepts like the immersive global lifestyle brand SIRO, a “fitness and recovery hotel.” Zulal Wellness Resort by Chiva-Som in Qatar, the Middle East’s first full-immersion wellness resort, offers TAIM (traditional Arabic and Islamic medicine) treatments and hosted the German World Cup soccer team in 2022.

The global sports market is predicted to hit $20 billion by 2027, and we’re going to see new, creative, profitable intersections between sports and wellness. Sports of all types are being seen as a strategy to attract and connect with wellness-oriented consumers and travelers—and this timely business trend shows no sign of stopping.

Hospitality companies are catering to the rising interest and demand for wellness experiences, including the grand, historic Mohonk Mountain House in Hudson Valley, New York, which has provided a retreat for urban dwellers since Victorian times © Karen Rubin/goingplacesfarandnear.com

WELLNESS + WATER: Blue, Hot and Wild

By Jane Kitchen

The pandemic spurred a hunger for in-nature experiences that shows no signs of abating. But when we talk about the nature surge, we usually remain on terra firma. In 2023, people will jump into the world’s wild waters for some “blue wellness”— with an unprecedented global surge in new-look hot springs destinations and wild and cross-country swimming going global. (The film, “Avatar: The Way of Water” likely helped.)

At the steamy end of the temperature spectrum, hot springs are now poised to be the next big thing in wellness. There are an unprecedented number of new and in-the-pipeline global destinations and new life is being breathed into long-forgotten facilities–from Australia to the US (where about 50 new projects are underway). A whole new social era in hot springs has arrived, where developers are combining live entertainment, watery wellness classes, restaurants and bars with traditional soaking. At Peninsula Hot Springs in Australia, take in live bands from its hot springs amphitheaters and do some hot springs yoga; at Sky Lagoon in Reykjavik, you soak in the midnight sun while sipping prosecco from a swim-up bar; you’ll soon be able to watch a baseball game while soaking in hot springs at Hokkaidos’ ESCON Field. This is social, affordable wellness and it’s pulling in a younger, diverse crowd.

Hot springs, Blue Lagoon, Iceland. The future of wellness and nature immersion? Blue, hot, cold and wild. © Karen Rubin/goingplacesfarandnear.com

On the cold side of the trend, there is surging interest in wild, cold and cross-country swimming, once the domains of serious athletes. Wild swimming groups like the Bluetits Chill Swimmers offer inclusive group swims that foster connection, and more global resorts are offering guided wild swimming programs—whether the Hotel J in Sweden or New York’s Mohonk Mountain House. Cross-country swimming is starting to take off, epic adventures where hiking and wild swimming are combined. People are even building wild swimming ponds instead of the old concrete swimming pools.

The future of wellness and nature immersion? Blue, hot, cold and wild.

WELLNESS + CITIES: Urban Infrastructure Just Might Save Cities

By Robbie Hammond and Omar Toro-Vacay

The role of the city has been reimagined countless times over the centuries (they’ve been trading posts, political and artistic centers, and, recently, concrete jungles of retail and offices). But the pandemic served as a wake-up call for just how unwell our cities are—sparking a new recognition of the inextricable relationship between the health of the cities and the health of city dwellers. Global cities are now at another historical inflection point where they are rebuilding themselves around the wellness needs of their citizens. “Urban wellness infrastructure” is no longer perceived as a luxury—it’s a necessity.

Urban wellness infrastructure—the melding of capital improvements and business opportunities that holistically address social, mental and physical health—is being embraced around the world as a solution for accelerating growth, fueling post-pandemic recovery and cultivating healthier, happier citizens.

There are so many powerful examples. Developed 20 years ago on an abandoned railway line in the heart of Manhattan, the Highline is a pioneering example of this trend—a wellness destination in its own right where people exercise, socialize and take in natural beauty in the heart of the city, which has become one of the most popular tourist sites in the city. The Highline has inspired over 60 such projects across America. The 11th Street Bridge Park in Washington, DC, a new public space project that connects neighborhoods and helps cross racial and economic divides, is an example of the new community-building urban wellness infrastructure.

The Highline, created out of a decrepit highway, is now one of the top attractions in New York City. Cities, back as a top destination for travelers, are consciously restructuring around health and wellness for residents and visitors alike. © Karen Rubin/goingplacesfarandnear.com

In Singapore, the government is striving to become an “urban wellness haven,” creating a whole slate of programs and initiatives that showcase the city’s unique natural and wellness resources. In Monterrey, Mexico, a successful collaboration between private and public organizations, DistritoTec, is creating a thriving new community with wellness at its core—a model Mexico plans to replicate.

To remain vital in the next century, cities must become places not to survive but to thrive. That’s only possible with a new wellness infrastructure.

[Indeed, cities are making a comeback as top destinations for travelers in 2023 after the pandemic steered people to wide-open spaces. But much of the adaptations that worked so well to keep people well during the pandemic – like advance purchase timed-ticket admissions to museums and attractions to control capacity – are being kept in place.]

WELLNESS + SENSES: Multisensory Integration

By Ari Peralta

Advances in neuroscience and neuroaesthetics confirm that, when combined, the senses elevate our human experience. Nature is multisensory and it turns out, so are we. The senses have always been present in wellness. In fact, we subconsciously associate many wellness activities with one sense or another… spa is touch, wellness music is sound, chromotherapy is color, healthy food is taste and thermal is temperature. This siloed approach is quickly changing in remarkable ways.

Now brands are accessing multiple senses simultaneously to better support wellbeing outcomes, amplify wellness experience and influence behavioral change—think using multiple sensory cues in a harmonious way to deepen meditation. With a better grasp on evidence, wellness brands are using multisensory integration as an approach to deepen and amplify felt experiences. From wellness brands to spas to retailers, they are experimenting with playful combinations of light and sound, light and taste, etc., to build connection and more meaningful moments.

Some examples: In Saudi Arabia, the AIUIa Wellness Festival has curated a 360-degree multisensory event allowing visitors to stimulate and elevate all five senses amidst ancient and stunning surroundings; while Six Senses has teamed with mycoocoon to create synesthetic dining experiences, enabling guests to “taste” color and sound, while, in the metaverse, digital sense is becoming a reality, adding scent and touch to sight and sound.

WELLNESS + GATHERING: Wellness Comes for the Loneliness Epidemic

By Beth McGroarty

We “know” loneliness is skyrocketing, that it kills and that the #1 predictor of health and happiness is relationships. But somehow, the recent uber-capitalist wellness market has led with two things: a sea of keep-them-spending “me time” products and “digital wellness”both lonely journeys of “self-care.” The pandemic has proven to be the breaking point. The biggest wellness trend is the development of new spaces and experiences that bring people together in real life—creatively and with intentionwhere social connection is the burning center of the concept.

Social wellness clubs with different vibes and price-points will surge, where group bonding comes first and the (sometimes dizzying menus of) wellness experiences serve as social icebreakersfrom pioneer Remedy Place to social bathhouse Othership to Six Senses Place. With remote work, people need everyday places to be and belongand younger gens, who are ditching booze and bars, seek healthier social spaces. With human “communication” having devolved into emojis, the wellness world is now teaching us how to connect and empathize more deeply. Peoplehood, the group conversation concept from SoulCycle’s founders, nixes the bikes to teach “relational fitness” through active listening. “Empatho-delics/actives” (that drive human openness) will rise: psilocybin, MDMA (in clinical trials), and ancient botanical “social elixirs,” such as kanna and kava.

Boat Bike Tours’ cycling trip from Bruges to Amsterdam. Travel affords unlimited opportunities for social interaction and engagement, bringing together people from all points of the globe © Karen Rubin/goingplacesfarandnear.com

Tackling loneliness is a huge trend beyond the wellness space. Startups are bringing connection to those who need it most, whether it’s the elderly or black men. New social apps/platforms are actually social, creating dinner parties for strangers or bonding apartment dwellers. More governments are fighting loneliness with new policies, and there’s even a new “social medicine.” The future of wellness? A move from lonely to social self-care, from buying to belonging, from URL to IRL, from ego to empathy, from Goop to group.

[Travel is the antidote to loneliness, promoting social interactions. And while solo travel is one of the biggest new trends for 2023, but there are even apps that cater to solo travelers and that match people with travel buddies.]

Wellness + Workplace: Workplace Wellness Finally Starts to Mean Something

by Skyler Hubler and Cecelia Girr

From protected time off and prioritizing vacation time to finally acknowledging women’s health needs, employee wellness is getting a much-needed rethink. Employers have been casually tossing around the word “wellness” since the 1980s. But four decades later, we have little to show for it. Worldwide, 70% of knowledge workers have experienced burnout in the past year, and a recent global study found that 38% of workers hate their jobs so much that they wouldn’t wish it on their worst enemy. Clearly, all those “workplace wellness” initiatives haven’t been working for us. But with the pandemic dramatically accelerating shifts in work models and the mental health crisis—and employees newly empowered—things are changing

Copper Mountain Resort, Colorado Rockies: company-wide vacations and outings are part of a new focus on wellness in the workplace © Karen Rubin/goingplacesfarandnear.com

Superficial wellness at work schemes are being replaced with more meaningful solutions. Better balance is being achieved through movements such as extended, company-wide vacations and the “right to disconnect” from emails after hours; employers making in-person time count with memorable offsites and gatherings at wellness resorts and social wellness clubs (meetings held in ice baths are officially a thing). The workplace wellness reform is well underway and it’s set to change everything, from how we connect with coworkers to what we look for in a job.

[Indeed, there is every indication that some variation of remote work will remain, and people will claim their opportunity to be nomadic workers.]

WELLNESS + GOVERNMENTS: The Case for Coming Together

By Thierry Malleret

Wellness policies have been years in the making, but in 2023 and beyond, they will evolve, multiply and strengthen. Governments “know” the crippling economic and societal costs that come when people don’t feel mentally and physically well. They “know” that unwellness shrinks the labor force while simultaneously hurting productivity—the worst possible combo for long-term economic growth. They “know” that preventative wellness saves public money because it always costs less than cure.

Now more governments are moving from knowing to action, pursuing diversified policies aimed at, pursuing policies—aimed at improving physical, mental, work, environmental, and even financial wellbeingfrom healthy eating campaigns to funding regenerative agriculture and biodiversity protection.

Wellness policies will become far more prominent on the political agendas of national, regional and local governments. We predict they will be: (1) more expansive, by encompassing adjacent policies that contribute to our planetary, societal and individual wellbeing; (2) more “muscular,” toughening regulations and fighting vested interests; and (3) more local, because the greatest policy-success stories happen when you empower communities at the local level.

The Future of Wellness 2023 Trends report just released by the Global Wellness Summit identifies 12 key wellness trends impacting the wellness economy in 2023 and beyond. More information or to purchase the report, www.globalwellnesssummit.com/2023-global-wellness-trends.

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© 2023 Travel Features Syndicate, a division of Workstyles, Inc. All rights reserved. Visit goingplacesfarandnear.com, www.huffingtonpost.com/author/karen-rubin, and travelwritersmagazine.com/TravelFeaturesSyndicate/. Blogging at goingplacesnearandfar.wordpress.com and moralcompasstravel.info. Visit instagram.com/going_places_far_and_near and instagram.com/bigbackpacktraveler/ Send comments or questions to [email protected]. Tweet @TravelFeatures. ‘Like’ us at facebook.com/NewsPhotoFeatures