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🧳 Ever notice how the hardest part of travel isn’t the flight… it’s the re-entry? 🏠

  • Writer: Olly Bridge
    Olly Bridge
  • Jan 12
  • 1 min read

After 4 weeks on the road, you don’t just come home to your house, you come home to washing, mail, decisions, pace, expectations… and a nervous system that’s been living out of a suitcase.


Getting home isn’t “back to normal”, it’s a transition that needs recovery built in.


What the science suggests 🧠

Long-haul travel can create circadian misalignment (jet lag), which is associated with sleep disruption and reduced daytime performance (Waterhouse et al., 2007 - https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17852691/; Lee & Galvez, 2012 - https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23016089/). And when we jump straight from travel stress into high cognitive demand, the allostatic load framework suggests repeated stress activation without enough recovery can accumulate ‘wear-and-tear’ over time (McEwen, 2004 - https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15677391/).


What this means for real leaders ✈️

Try a simple 24-hour re-entry protocol:


Anchor your morning: sunlight + a short walk

One “non-negotiable” health habit before email (sleep, training, food prep)

Lower the first-day load: fewer meetings, more thinking time

Name the transition: “I’m home, but I’m not fully ‘back’ yet” (it helps)


Because sustainable performance isn’t about snapping back, it’s about returning well… so your leadership doesn’t pay the price later.

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