7 Unexpected Benefits of a Self-Prescribed Autumnal Writers Retreat | By Amy Roullier, British Author & Poet.

I’ve just arrived in the Yorkshire countryside for a little self-prescribed writers retreat. A much-needed escape to make headway on my second poetry collection.

At home, the distractions were endless: laundry, emails, and that never-ending to-do list. I needed somewhere quiet. Somewhere emotive. Somewhere that could bring me back to myself.

So, I packed up, booked a cottage, and headed to the Yorkshire Moors with one clear goal: to write.

And within the first day, it struck me how powerful this break already was. Not just for my book, but for my soul. Here are seven unexpected benefits of stepping away from your everyday life and into an autumnal writers retreat of your own.

1. Autumn Is the Most Emotive Season for Writing

There’s something about autumn, that soft melancholy that sets in as the days grow shorter and the air a little colder.

For me, it’s the season that awakens my creative urges more than any other. My heart already longs for spring, my body craves warmth, and my thoughts stir with longing, nostalgia, and the occasional bout of sweet self-pity. And yet, I marvel at the firework of golds, ambers and deep ruby erupting from the treeline, nature’s way of letting go in full colour. That’s when my emotions spill most freely onto the page.

If summer is for living, autumn is for feeling. And for writers, that’s the gateway to something beautiful.

2. Nature Fuels the Writer’s Soul

There’s a deep, almost spiritual connection between nature and creativity. Different landscapes ignite different thoughts — and here in Yorkshire, the rolling hills, rugged trails, and misty mornings spark poetry in ways no urban setting ever could.

Walking through mud-soaked paths, looking out at never ending miles of rolling hills, wind lashing at my face, the occasional sunlight creeping through the clouds as if highlighting particular areas of beauty — it all feeds something primal. It connects me to the kind of writer I want to be: raw, reflective, present.

3. No Distractions, No Excuses

At home, I can find a thousand reasons not to write. Here, I have none.

My daily to-do list now includes just two things:
1. Walk
2. Write

The simplicity is liberating, its so peaceful without the constant demand of fast paced rushing from one thing to another. I’ve carved out structured writing blocks, long outdoor walks for reflection, and quiet evenings reading my favourite poets. There’s just me, the dogs, nature and the page.

4. Deep Dives Into Inspiration (and My Favourite Authors)

I brought a stack of poetry books with me — Andrea Gibson, Isabelle Correa, Donna Ashworth, Kate Baer. When I hit a creative block, I dive into their words, to remind myself of the magic that can be made with just the right phrase, the right pause, the right heartbreak.

Being away allows me to fully immerse myself in other writers’ genius, and challenge myself to level up in my own work.

5. Escape from Capitalism’s Burnout Trap

We live in a culture of chronic productivity. Spin all the plates, achieve all the goals, answer all the emails — all while staying smiling, social, and strong.

But we weren’t made for this pace. Our nervous systems weren’t wired for constant stimulation.

That’s part of why I came here. To disconnect from the digital noise and reconnect to natural stillness.

We’re not meant to experience nature through a screen, or friendship through rushed texts. We’re not meant to perform our lives for social media. Here, alone, in the countryside, I feel something in me realign. Call it therapy, self-care, or just old-fashioned common sense — but it’s working. My self-prescribed writers retreat is healing.

6. Reclaiming Structure (Without Burnout)

Structure can feel rigid at home. But here, structure feels supportive. It helps me nudge my creativity into flow, without falling into the pit of perfectionism or performance.

I wake, I walk, I write. Sometimes it flows. Sometimes it doesn’t. But the time is carved out either way, and the rhythm helps me find my footing again — as a writer, and a woman figuring out what this next poetry collection is trying to say.

7. Reflection

Long walks through green, amber, copper and ruby forests. Strolling past ancient cottages and crumbling stone walls. Wandering through market towns and exploring old bookshops. Marvelling at structures, hundreds of years old.

These quiet moments become sacred spaces for reflection, the kind of moments that lead to sudden clarity, unexpected poems, and new ideas I didn’t know were brewing inside me.

Even when I’m not writing, I’m writing.
Even when I’m walking, I’m creating.

One Downside: The Lack of Writer Community

The only downside to a solo retreat is, of course, the solitude. And not in the poetic sense.

There’s no one to bounce ideas off. No one to workshop poems with over wine. But I know that for me, when I’m in the creation phase, I’m still too fragile to let others in. I’m too sensitive to feedback. Too protective. I assume everything I write is rubbish (don’t we all?). But once the first draft is done, I’ll be ready to share, edit, and refine.

So, Here I Am.

Hopefully finding the right balance between exploring the Yorkshire Moors and putting together the final threads of my next poetry book.

I’ve even found time this morning to write this blog, feeling full to the brim with inspiration and motivation. However, the ocean calls and Whitby awaits today, making this blog a brief writing interlude ahead of walking out the door.

If you could book your own self-prescribed writer’s retreat, where would you go?
Let me know in the comments or drop me a message — I’d love to hear your dream destinations.

And if you’re curious about my poetry collections, you can find them here.

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Amy Roullier