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Traveling Through Grief: Why Getting Away Helped Me Breathe Again

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A warm, golden view from an airplane window, symbolizing hope and healing during grief. Soft sunlight filters across the clouds, creating a calm, reflective mood.

šŸ’” When a Birthday Doesn’t Feel Like a Celebration

My first real trip after my husband passed away was for my birthday. I’ve always been big on birthdays — especially mine — but that year, I didn’t feel like celebrating.

We were the same age, only five months apart. He was forever 41, and I was turning 42. That birthday felt like crossing an invisible line — one that he’d never get to reach. It was one of those grief milestones that sneak up on you, one of the ā€œfirstsā€ that you wish you could skip.

My mom convinced me to go to Las Vegas. I’d never been before, and something about that sounded right — a place filled with light and life, but one that didn’t hold any shared memories to trip over. No old restaurants, no familiar streets whispering his name. Just something new.

🌻 Carrying Him With Me (Even Without His Ashes)

Before the trip, I had this idea that I wanted to be one of those widows who takes a small bit of her husband’s ashes and sprinkles them in every new place she visits. I wanted him to be part of each new adventure. But when the time came, I couldn’t do it.

I couldn’t part with those tiny pieces of him — not yet. Instead, I wore my necklace that holds a bit of his ashes close to my heart. I couldn’t leave him in Vegas, but I could carry him with me everywhere I went.

He was there with me in every sunrise, every laugh, every moment of wonder that I decided to let myself feel again.

A close-up of a hand holding the handle of a pink suitcase, softly lit with warm golden tones, symbolizing courage and the beginning of a healing journey after loss.
Sometimes healing starts with the smallest steps — like picking up a suitcase and daring to go

šŸŽ² Vegas, Adventure, and the Beginning of ā€œLiving Againā€

I went with my mom, her girlfriend, and my oldest daughter. I was nervous and excited — two feelings that hadn’t shared space in my chest since before he died.

Vegas was loud, alive, and everything my grief wasn’t. I got drunk in the casino and danced in the middle of the floor. We went on foodie tasting tours, tried some of the best restaurants, and partied hard on Fremont Street.

There was a bit of sadness that he wasn’t there to experience it with me — he would’ve loved it — but there was also so much adventure to be had. My husband always acted like life was one big adventure, and I’m trying to honor him by making sure I still have adventures in life too.

For a long time, it felt like a part of me had died with him. But somewhere between the laughter, the food, and the late-night lights, I felt myself start to come alive again.

āœˆļø What Travel Taught Me About Healing

Travel didn’t cure my grief — it softened it. It reminded me that life isn’t done showing me beautiful things. When you step into a new place, you leave behind the routines that make grief feel heavier. You make room for something else — curiosity, gratitude, even joy.

Here’s what helped me:

  • Start small. You don’t have to fly across the country. Even a day trip can shift your energy.
  • Let yourself feel everything. You can cry in beautiful places. It’s allowed.
  • Bring comfort items. A favorite photo, journal, or necklace can help you feel grounded.
  • Go where there are no shared memories. It’s okay to start somewhere fresh.
  • Don’t wait until you ā€œfeel ready.ā€ Sometimes you heal because you go, not before you go.

šŸ’› The Gift of Distance

That trip didn’t erase my sadness, but it gave me space to breathe again. Distance has a way of helping you see that healing isn’t forgetting — it’s remembering differently.

Travel reminded me that I can hold grief and joy at the same time. That I can laugh, explore, and live — not because I’ve stopped missing him, but because I’m still here. And that’s what he would have wanted.

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If you’re finding comfort here, you might enjoy more reflections and gentle grief support from Gentle Grief Support by Bonded by Art — a space for healing hearts to rest, reflect, and feel less alone.

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