San Antonio Express-News

More vacationer­s embark on a journey toward healing

- By Concepción de León

Before the pandemic, when Mary Calliste, 32, traveled, she would try to hit as many tourist attraction­s as she could. But in early December, Calliste, who works in the financial services industry out of Plainfield, N.J., went to Guatemala and stayed at an eco-friendly hotel called Lush Atitlán. There, she ate vegan meals, walked around the natural reserve and listened to music.

And loved it.

From now on, she said, “I see myself incorporat­ing a lot more of my needs into my travel instead of what I can see.”

As the pandemic nears its third calendar year, it’s probably not surprising that travelers are increasing­ly looking to their vacations to work on their mental and physical wellness. In a recent American Express survey, 76 percent of respondent­s said they wanted to spend more on travel that improves their wellbeing, and 55 percent said they would be willing to pay extra for these services or activities.

That has hotels ramping up their wellness offerings, from outfitting rooms with Peloton exercise bikes to adding programs that address mental health. Hilton has created a program called Five Feet to Fitness, which includes an interactiv­e kiosk with fitness tutorials and a gym’s worth of equipment in some rooms.

At Miraval Resorts & Spas locations, guests over the past year have come in “having experience­d symptoms of stress that they, quite frankly, were unfamiliar with,” said Simon Marxer, the hotel group’s associate vice president for wellness offerings.

In April, Miraval partnered with the National Alliance on Mental Illness to create Journeys With Intention, a customizab­le wellness program that allows guests to choose from a selection of “journeys” according to their health goals. Among the offerings: self-connection, grief and loss, and mental well-being, as well as more standard spa, adventure and fitness programs.

“What we’re seeing, certainly in hospitalit­y, is the need to serve really the whole person,” Marxer said.

Spas took a hit

Spas, with their focus on high-touch, one-on-one services like massages and facials, were hit hard last year. Hotel and resort spas experience­d a 42 percent dip in revenues, while destinatio­n spas, which offer an immersive experience, were down 37 percent, according to a report by the Global Wellness Institute published this month. But the wellness industry has since begun a rapid recovery, the report said, projecting that the spa sector will grow 17 percent annually through 2025.

Still, the downturn forced hotels and resorts — and their guests — to expand their notions of wellness and what activities fall under that umbrella. Before the pandemic, a wellness trip was probably centered on a spa’s traditiona­l services, said Caroline Klein, chief communicat­ions officer of Preferred Hotels & Resorts, a luxury hotel group. Now, hotels may offer nature walks, meditation, yoga or any number of creative offerings.

In some ways, hotels are responding to the lifestyles that many people adopted at the height of lockdowns, including making home-cooked meals and taking virtual fitness classes.

“Hotels are really seeing people bring those new mindsets, routines and preference­s with them as they start to travel again,” Klein said. “What that creates is a definite shift in expectatio­ns and experience­s that hotels need to cater to, because they’re not catering to the traveler from 2019.”

Changing travel styles

What people want out of a vacation is shifting, said Chris Kam, president and chief operating officer of Omnitrak, a Hawaii-based research company that conducts regular national travel surveys. While travel has always been a reset, during the pandemic, “the travel experience transforme­d and became a place to heal — from mental, physical, spiritual stress,” he said in an email. “People travel for answers now about how to feel better.”

Industry experts say the wellness travel trend is here to stay. The United States accounted for nearly 30 percent of the global wellness tourism market in 2020, and the sector is expected to grow to $919 billion by 2022 from $735.8 billion in 2020, according to the Global Wellness Institute.

“This is where we were headed,” Marxer of Miraval Resorts & Spas said. “The pandemic has brought the future forward in an accelerate­d way.”

 ?? Hilton Hotels ?? Fitness equipment comes with this Hilton hotel room. Wellness vacations now extend beyond traditiona­l massages and spa treatments as travelers seek a way to heal from physical and mental stress brought on by a pandemic that seems unending.
Hilton Hotels Fitness equipment comes with this Hilton hotel room. Wellness vacations now extend beyond traditiona­l massages and spa treatments as travelers seek a way to heal from physical and mental stress brought on by a pandemic that seems unending.

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