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Why ‘high-performers’ get sick as soon as they go on vacation — and how to prevent it

July 9, 2026
in News
Why ‘high-performers’ get sick as soon as they go on vacation — and how to prevent it

The out-of-office message is on and the laptop is shut. The long-awaited vacation has finally begun.

Then comes the sore throat, the stuffy nose and the pounding headache.

The cruel irony? After weeks of pushing through deadlines and nonstop responsibilities, some high achievers find that the moment they finally slow down is when they start feeling sick.

A woman in a bright orange bikini blows her nose with a tissue while relaxing in a beach chair.
Some women say they come down with a cold just as vacation begins. Antonioguillem – stock.adobe.com

That’s according to a viral TikTok from somatic instructor Liz Tenuto, who claims that “high-achieving women getting a cold on day 2 of every single vacation.”

According to Tenuto, years of running on chronic stress keep cortisol levels elevated, allowing women to push through exhaustion — until they finally relax, when their bodies seemingly “crash.”

The video struck a nerve.

“Literally happened to me every vacation since I was a child,” one user wrote.

“As a teacher, this happens EVERY extended break we have,” another commented. “I get so sick on the first/second day that I spend the whole week just recovering.”

“It is me. I am this woman. Happens on almost every single vacation!” another wrote.

Tenuto attributed the pattern to what’s often called the let-down effect — the idea that some people become ill shortly after a stressful period ends.

While the TikTok isn’t medical gospel, experts say it is pointing toward a real and biologically plausible phenomenon.

@theworkoutwitch

the let-down effect is when someone develops symptoms of illness, fatigue, pain, migraines, or emotional distress immediately after a period of prolonged stress ends 👇🏼 researchers have observed that people are more likely to get sick on vacation, on weekends, after major work deadlines, after caregiving crisises, or after big life events like moving or athletic competitions the science behind this is: during periods of sustained stress, the body’s stress-response systems help maintain performance and temporarily alter immune, inflammatory, and pain-processing functions but when the stressor ends, and the body shifts into recovery mode, symptoms that were previously suppressed or postponed become noticeable it’s not that relaxation or vacation makes you sick… it’s that relaxation finally gave your body permission to reveal how depleted it already was, which resulted in sickness the moment you slowed down do you want to lower your cortisol so your immune system can stabilize and you don’t get sick when you go on vacation? 👇🏼 “lower my cortisol” 🔗 on my profile 💖✌🏼💖 • • • #immunesystem #highacheiver #hyperindependent #stressed #stress

♬ SUMMER – THE CARTERS

“The body does not always switch from high-output survival mode into rest mode smoothly,” Dr. Henry Legere, MD, Chief Medical Officer at Restore Hyper Wellness told The Post.

“For some people — especially high-responsibility, high-performing individuals — the first few days of vacation are when the bill for chronic stress finally comes due.”

That doesn’t necessarily mean relaxation itself causes illness.

Rather, Legere said prolonged stress can keep the body in a heightened fight-or-flight state, fueled by hormones like cortisol and adrenaline. During that time, sleep often suffers, the immune system shifts and many people simply unknowingly push through aches, fatigue and similar early stages of illness.

A middle-aged Hispanic woman, wearing a sunhat and seated on a sofa, coughs into her hand while packing a suitcase with summer clothes.
Legere says the transition from chronic stress to relaxation may help explain why some people notice headaches, fatigue or cold-like symptoms. Krakenimages.com – stock.adobe.com

“When stress abruptly drops, people may notice symptoms more, inflammatory pathways may rebound, migraines can be triggered, and latent viral or respiratory symptoms may become apparent,” he explained.

Scientists sometimes refer to this as leisure sickness, but Legere cautioned that neither leisure sickness nor the let-down effect is an official medical diagnosis. While intriguing, the research is also limited.

One small Dutch study published in 2002 found that roughly 3% of participants reported regularly becoming sick during weekends or vacations, with headaches, fatigue, muscles aches, nausea and cold-like symptoms among the most common complaints. Researchers observed that symptoms often appeared during the first few days off and suggested the transition from chronic work activation to relaxation could play a role.

Still, the study relied largely on self-reported experiences, with the authors themselves calling for more research.

So is getting sick the minute vacation begins all in your head? Not necessarily.

“It’s directionally credible, but likely overstated,” said Legere of the viral TikTok.

There also isn’t strong evidence that the phenomenon affects achieving women in particular. While that group may identify with the trend, Legere says anyone living under prolonged stress could potentially experience a similar rebound.

If there’s a silver lining, it’s that vacation doesn’t have to end with tissues and throat lozenges. Legere recommends easing into time off instead of treating vacation like an on-off switch.

That means gradually wrapping up major work projects instead of sprinting to the finish line, protecting sleep in the days leading up to travel and staying well hydrated before and during the trip.

He also advised limiting heavy drinking, keeping caffeine habits relatively consistent to avoid withdrawal headaches and fitting in light movement — such as walking or stretching — on travel days to help the body adjust.

Perhaps most importantly, resist the urge to pack every minute of vacation with activities. If possible, build in a decompression day.

“Treat vacation as recovery training rather than total collapse,” said Legere.

The post Why ‘high-performers’ get sick as soon as they go on vacation — and how to prevent it appeared first on New York Post.

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