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Mindful Travel vs Instagram Travel, Which Creates Better Memories?

Travel around the world has changed in a specific way over the last decade. Saved-Reels folders now come before bookings. Bookings come before destinations. Where someone goes is increasingly chosen for how it will photograph rather than for what it presents. This is the era of Instagram Holidays and they have become the default mode of travel for many Indian women in their twenties and thirties. Its alternative, increasingly known as mindful travel, is gaining ground for a simple reason. For all its visual rewards, the Instagram model of travel leaves people coming home tired.

The pattern is well-documented. In the UK, the Royal Society for Public Health published its #StatusOfMind report in 2017, ranking Instagram as the worst social media platform for the mental health of young people, particularly young women, after surveying nearly 1,500 respondents. What drove the rankings was not the photographs. It was the persistent comparison with filtered, curated, edited versions of other lives.
More recent academic work in tourism research has extended the same finding to travel, showing that visual platforms drive destination choices through FOMO and social comparison, and that the gap between the trip seen on a feed and the trip actually taken is itself a source of dissatisfaction.

The shift is showing up in the numbers. In India, solo female travel bookings on one major hostel network climbed from around 33,000 in 2018 to more than 92,000 in 2025, close to tripling in seven years, according to Zostel’s Women’s Day data report. The wider move towards experience-led travel runs alongside it, with the global experiential travel market valued in the trillions and growing at roughly 7 per cent a year across recent industry estimates. Wellness travel follows the same line, reaching about 894 billion US dollars in 2024 and forecast to pass one trillion within the decade, per the Global Wellness Institute.

What Mindful Travel Actually Is, Beyond the Yoga Retreat Aesthetic

Mindful Travel vs Instagram Holidays | Women-Only Tours
Strip the wellness marketing away and the term has a working definition. Mindful travel is travel built around presence, intention and connection rather than content production. Where someone goes matters less than what they do with the days spent there. The brief is simple, come back having had an experience, not a documented version of one.

The trade-off is real. Instagram-centric travel rewards instantly. A photo, a fresh round of likes, the algorithmic warmth that follows a well-timed carousel. On the other hand, mindful travel rewards slowly and partly in private. Its benefits show up not immediately after the holiday but in the months that follow, when the traveller realises that they retained something meaningful. Be it a conversation with the woman who ran the homestay or an afternoon spent doing nothing on a balcony in Goa.

At Meraki Diaries, we have watched a steady shift among women travellers, away from collecting photos and towards meaningful travel experiences. The women-only trips are built around exactly this kind of slower day.

What an Instagram Holidays Actually Costs

Mindful Travel vs Instagram Holidays | Women-Only Tours

Financial cost is the smallest part of it. Attention is the deeper one. Arriving somewhere, having already seen it through a phone for six weeks, means spending much of the trip checking the real experience against the image carried in. The sunset is either better than the Reel or disappointing. That cafe in the saved post turns out either as photogenic as advertised or unremarkable. Somewhere along the way, the traveller stops being a traveller and starts being a comparison engine.

There is a parallel cost in how behaviour changes without permission. Tourists queue in groups of thirty at the same Santorini staircase for the same photograph. Many miss the Lisbon trams running through Mouraria while standing in line for the famous yellow Tram 28. Travellers book the same Bali pool villa their cousin’s friend posted last year and realise mid-trip that they did not actually want a Bali pool villa; they wanted the idea of one. None of this is anyone’s fault. The platform rewards exactly this behaviour.

What Is Mindful Travel and Why Does It Matter?

Mindful Travel vs Instagram Holidays | Women-Only Tours

Travel that helps the inner self does not require climbing to base camp or sitting for ten days at a Vipassana centre. It usually involves a handful of smaller things done with intention. Going somewhere slowly enough to actually arrive in it. Eating meals in homes rather than only in restaurants. Learning one craft, one phrase, one local custom that the place is known for. Travelling with people genuinely worth spending time with. Putting the phone away for stretches long enough to be inconvenient.

In practice, these are small moments. A vendor in Pampore explaining how she dries her saffron, the Chinese fishing nets in Cochin being pulled at dawn, an afternoon spent learning to roll Wazwan kebabs from a Kashmiri grandmother who patiently corrects each attempt. Reels rarely come out of these. The memory of them tends to hold up long after the rest has faded.

Slow travel, wellness travel and transformational travel all overlap here. They are different names for one shared idea, which is that the value of a journey is measured by what is brought back internally, not by what was posted while it was happening.

Why a Trusted Group Helps More Than Most Travellers Expect

Mindful Travel vs Instagram Holidays | Women-Only Tours
The real difficulty with attempting this alone is the discipline required. A phone wins out eventually, an algorithm pulls attention back, and an optimised itinerary sneaks into the day no matter how hard the traveller resists. Going with a planned group changes things entirely because the day is planned around shared meals, easy-going activities and time spent with locals.
Women travel groups in India have become one of the more interesting categories in the country’s travel industry. The model removes the planning load, creates a community of women who are on the trip for the same reasons, and lets the days revolve around things that are difficult to do alone. Cooking with a local family. Walking a heritage trail with a guide who actually grew up in the city. Sitting through long conversations after meals.
Meraki Diaries is one of the trusted names in this space. The brand operates women-only travel groups across India and internationally, with active trips through Kashmir, Ladakh, Spain, Portugal and others, all kept small and centred on local experiences rather than tourist circuits. The itineraries are unhurried, made for moments that take a few hours rather than a few seconds. Long lunches, coffee with local families, walks with artisans, unscheduled afternoons that go to the kind of expressive conversations no Reel will capture.

If you are looking for a women’s travel community that values connection over checklists and experiences over algorithms, explore upcoming Meraki Diaries journeys across India and beyond.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. What is mindful travel?
Mindful travel means building a trip around presence, intention and connection rather than content production. The aim is to come home with an experience rather than a documented version of one, so where you go matters less than what you do with the days spent there.
Regular tourism tends to move through a checklist of sights at speed. Mindful travel slows the days down and gives them to meaningful travel experiences such as shared meals, local crafts and long conversations. It sits close to slow travel and wellness travel, where the value of a journey is measured by what you bring back internally.
Yes. Solo travel for women works well with a mindful approach, since the days go to connection rather than ticking off landmarks. Many women travellers join a small group for the company and the ease, which removes the planning load while keeping the trip personal.
Women-only travel groups give many travellers a stronger sense of safe travel for women, with vetted local partners, female-friendly stays and a shared understanding within the group. Safety is never absolute, yet group travel for women lowers several of the practical risks of travelling alone.
A travel community for women brings together people who are on the trip for the same reasons. The brand handles logistics, local hosts lead the experiences, and the group shares meals, walks and downtime. A woman’s travel community tends to keep numbers small so the days stay personal.

About Arunima Kundu

Arunima Kundu is the founder and voice behind Meraki Diaries, where storytelling meets intention and purpose. A seasoned creative leader and storyteller, she believes in creating work that is rooted in emotion, mindfulness, and meaning. Having travelled to over 20 countries, Arunima’s narratives are shaped by global perspectives, slow travel philosophies, and a deep appreciation for conscious living. She was recognised as one of the Top 10 Women in Hospitality (2021) by Women Entrepreneurs Review, is a proud signatory of UN Women, and serves as a mentor associated with the Glasgow Climate Change movement and the UN Compass Programme for Women and Girls. Through Meraki Diaries, she continues to champion authentic storytelling, conscious leadership, and purpose-driven creation.

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