Thursday, February 05, 2026 |
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The days of jam-packed vacations that make you feel more exhausted than just staying home are over. Now it's all about wellness, rejuvenation, and longevity. More and more, hotels are adopting mocktails, farm-to-table dining experiences, and spas that can not only make you feel your best, but even legitimately assess your overall health. (We're changing primary care providers. To a doctor in the Dolomites.) Garrett Munce has traveled the world exploring these wellness resorts so you know exactly where to go next and what the hell you're in for. Below, you can read about the 10 properties that have quite literally changed his life. —Krista Jones, commerce director |
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From European wellness clinics to professional training camps, these destinations are made to change your body and your mind.
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If you've been to a hotel in the past year or so, you may have noticed something new. Nearly every hotel, from the casual roadside stop to the all-inclusive resort has all of a sudden started to focus on wellness. There are mocktail menus at complimentary happy hours, group yoga classes, locally sourced in-room snacks—the list goes on and on to varying degrees of what one might consider wellness. This is by design because, well, we all are obsessed with being well right now. Wellness, however you define it, has stopped being something just a few travelers want and become something nearly every traveler expects. Hotels are not dumb, either. They know that we, as travelers, are willing to pay big bucks for wellness. The global wellness market was valued at $893.9 billion in 2024, according to Statista, and is showing no signs of slowing down. We spent the year traveling the globe to find the most exciting, most innovative, and most unique new wellness destinations around the world for this list. So whether you want to train better, sleep better, eat better or just feel better, these are the places worth booking for a visit. |
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| The Washington Post laid off over 300 employees, a third of the Post's workforce. Its books section is gone. Its international reporting will wither and likely die. And, as a point of personal privilege, the Post's legendary sports section will evaporate. In my daily sportswriting days, there was no better or more talented crew to hang with at various events. I remember at the 1988 Olympics in Seoul, I decided one day to write a column on water polo, of which I knew nothing. About five minutes after I sat down, the late Ken Denlinger of the Post sat down next to me. "So," he said, "what's going on in the game?" How in the hell do I know, I answered. "Well," he said, "you've been here longer than me. You're the veteran." If there's anything about those days that I miss, it's the camaraderie of the press box, and it was always a party when the Post gang was there—Tom Boswell at the baseball games, Mike Wilbon and the late John Feinstein at some basketball arena or another, the great Sally Jenkins anywhere.
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Giorgio Armani single-handedly redefined the way in which the world's men dress. Some younger readers might think that it was Demna Gvasalia and his baggy reign at Balenciaga that made dressing in oversize tailoring cool, but really it all started with the late, great Italian menswear maestro.
Mr. Armani has now sadly passed away—and Demna has defected to Gucci, where he's now embracing a sharper silhouette—but a new menswear label with a penchant for drape-y, roomy, delectably syrupy suits is on the scene: Soshiotsuki, named after its Japanese-born-and-based founder, Soshi Otsuki.
"Fashion always moves in cycles, but it's not just a pendulum from loose to tight. What matters are proportion, comfort, and the attitude expressed," the designer tells me from his home in Tokyo. |
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