What We Get Right on Vacation

Ian Day, M.D.

Chief Medical Officer, Medi-Share
Published May 27, 2026
What We Get Right on Vacation

As a physician, I see every day how easily unhealthy habits take root. But I’ve also noticed something else. When we go on vacation, many of us naturally start doing things that are better for us.

When we get away, something often shifts. We slow the pace, get outside more, spend more time with family, and step back from screens and the constant pressures of everyday life. For many of us, that also creates more space to pray, reflect, and notice the beauty of the world around us.

And then we come home, and many of those habits disappear.

That tells us something. Many of us already know what healthier living looks like. The problem is not usually a lack of knowledge. More often, we treat good habits as temporary, as something for vacations or quieter stretches of life, rather than as part of everyday life.

Scripture reminds us in 1 Corinthians 6:19–20 that our bodies are temples of the Holy Spirit. Caring for our health is not just something to think about when life slows down; it is part of stewardship. And that stewardship is not only physical. It also shapes how we care for our relationships, how we spend time in God’s Word, and how we learn to rest.

We do not honor God only when life gets quieter. We honor Him in the ordinary pattern of daily life. This includes how we work, eat, rest, connect, worship, and pay attention to the people around us.

That is one of the things a vacation can teach us. It often reveals that we already know how to live in ways that are healthier, calmer, and less distracted. We struggle to hold on to those rhythms once normal life resumes.

One of the problems of modern life is to split everything into compartments. We tell ourselves we will rest when we go away, we will spend more time with family when things quiet down, and spend more time in Scripture when life calms down. We will focus on our health later.

But life does not really work like that.

As a physician, I can tell you that chronic disease rarely develops from a single bad day. It grows out of repeated patterns over time, including excessive sitting, insufficient sleep, poor eating habits, and chronic stress. The same is true spiritually. Time with God cannot become something we only return to when life feels quieter. Health in body, mind, and spirit is meant to be part of how we live.

That is part of what we get right on vacation. We move more, and that is good for cardiovascular and metabolic health. We rest more, which helps restore the body and mind. We step back from noise and distraction, and that is good for our mental well-being. We make time for people who matter most. We spend more time outdoors, and many of us find that life feels clearer and less cluttered as a result. Those are not habits we should unpack from our suitcases for a week or two, only to pack them away again when we get home.

The question may not be why vacation feels good. The question is, “Why do we settle for so little of that wisdom in everyday life?”

One of the simplest truths in medicine is that consistency matters more than intensity. Long-term health is not usually shaped by one perfect week. It is shaped by being active every day, getting regular rest, making healthier choices, and forming daily habits that last.

The same is true spiritually. Most growth does not happen in one dramatic moment. It happens through ordinary faithfulness, including regular time in God’s Word, prayer, gratitude, repentance, worship, and the daily choice to keep going.

Galatians 6:9 is so helpful in this way. “Let us not grow weary of doing good, for in due season we will reap, if we do not give up.” That applies not only to our service, but also to the daily choices that shape our health and our walk with God.

What if we stopped seeing a vacation simply as an escape and started seeing it as a reminder? What if the things we value while we are away, such as time with family, time outdoors, better rest, and less distraction, became patterns we tried to carry back into ordinary life?

That does not mean everyday life can feel like a vacation. Real life is still busy. Real life is still full of responsibilities. Schedules fill up quickly. But even in the middle of that, there is room for better rhythms, including intentional time with family, daily Scripture, regular movement, healthier sleep, boundaries with technology, and moments outdoors where we slow down enough to notice what is around us.

Vacation should not simply be an escape from real life. At its best, it can remind us of how life is meant to be lived. It can show us that a better way is possible. A way marked by more rest, more time outside, less distraction, and more attention to the people and priorities that matter most.

A vacation is a chance to enjoy your family, make meaningful memories, and return renewed. I hope you do exactly that. But when you get home, hold on to what helped you feel better while you were away. Carry forward the rhythms that matter:  a little more rest, a little more movement, time outdoors, time in Scripture, and intentional attention to the people and priorities that matter most. Those small, daily choices shape both our health and our faith over time.

Photo credit: ©GettyImages/TinnakornJorruang

Ian Day, M.D., serves as Chief Medical Officer for Medi-Share, the foremost faith-based healthcare-sharing platform nationwide, with a membership base of more than 350,000 individuals. Medi-Share is committed to a wholistic approach to biblical wellness, helping members live healthy and holy lives.