Dining Alone,
LuxuriouslyLearn to take yourself somewhere beautiful and feel completely, quietly at home there.
For the woman who has the trip booked, the dress ready, the reservation in her name, and a small voice in the back of her head wondering whether she'll feel awkward when she walks in. You won't. Not after this.
Learn to take yourself somewhere beautiful and feel completely, quietly at home there.
For the woman who has the trip booked, the dress ready, the reservation in her name, and a small voice in the back of her head wondering whether she'll feel awkward when she walks in. You won't. Not after this.
You know the feeling before you can name it.
The flight is booked. The hotel is the one you've been saving. There's a restaurant you've read about three times, and a reservation in your name for one. And somewhere underneath the excitement is a smaller, quieter question. What do I do when I walk in? Where will they put me? Will the whole room notice that the chair across from me is empty?
That question has kept more beautiful evenings small than I can count. Not because the women weren't ready. Because no one ever taught them the walk in.
This guide is the thing I wish someone had handed me before my first solo dinner.
What’s Inside:
Forty-four pages, in two parts
Part one: The Mindset
Seven small shifts to make before you ever pick up the menu.
How to walk in so the room receives you instead of seating you out of the way.
What to wear, and why the room reads it in about three seconds.
How to order so you're a regular on your first night.
The phone rule, and the first ten minutes that decide the whole dinner.
The ritual the hour before, the one that changes who walks through the door.
Where to sit, and why the seat changes the dinner more than the menu does.
Part two: The Destinations
Thirteen cities and islands where I've actually dined alone, and the rooms I trust most in each one.
Santorini, Amsterdam, Tampa, Miami, New York, Zakynthos, Corfu, Athens, Casco Viejo, Isla Palenque, Paris, London, and Barcelona.
For each: where I dined, what I ordered, and where to stay.
Plus the booking toolkit, the reservation email I actually send, and a closing reflection, A Table for One.
Who this is for:
The woman who wants to travel alone but isn't sure she'll feel at ease doing it.
The woman who's booked the trip after a milestone, a birthday, a win, a new chapter, and wants the dinners to feel like a gift, not a hurdle.
The solo traveler who wants the experience elevated, not just survivable.
Anyone learning to enjoy her own company at the table.
Why this is different:
Most travel guides are written from a desk, by someone who has never sat alone at the table they're recommending.
This one was written by a woman who has actually been alone in the room. Thirteen of them, in thirteen cities, in the seat I'm telling you to ask for. Every shift in these pages I learned the slow way, one dinner at a time, so you don't have to.
You know the feeling before you can name it.
The flight is booked. The hotel is the one you've been saving. There's a restaurant you've read about three times, and a reservation in your name for one. And somewhere underneath the excitement is a smaller, quieter question. What do I do when I walk in? Where will they put me? Will the whole room notice that the chair across from me is empty?
That question has kept more beautiful evenings small than I can count. Not because the women weren't ready. Because no one ever taught them the walk in.
This guide is the thing I wish someone had handed me before my first solo dinner.
WHERE THIS BEGAN
The night this began
I went to Santorini alone after a record-breaking, exhausting year, and quietly, after a heartbreak. I wasn't running from anything. I was giving myself something.
On a cool, rainy May evening, I had dinner alone at Botrini's, at a table by the infinity pool with the whole caldera below me. The staff saw me. They brought a heater to my side and laid a soft blanket over my lap. Each course came with its own small story.
And somewhere in the middle of it, tears began to slip down my cheeks. Not because I felt lonely. Because I felt proud. I had taken myself somewhere beautiful, and the room had received me like the guest of honor.
That night is why I wrote this. Not a guide about eating alone. A guide about learning to take yourself somewhere lovely, on purpose, and belong there completely.
The thing no one tells you
Here is what I've learned across every one of those dinners: the room responds to how you arrive.
Walk in apologizing, with your eyes, with a half-shrug, and you'll be seated quickly and quietly, out of the way. Walk in calmly, expecting to be received, and you will be. The awkwardness you're bracing for almost never belongs to the room. It belongs to the story you carry through the door, and that story is the one thing you get to choose.
That's the part most women never get taught. It isn't confidence you're born with or without. It's a skill, made of small, specific choices: how you walk in, what you wear, how you order, where you sit, what you do in the first ten minutes. Learn the choices and the ease follows.
The whole guide is those choices, written down.
WHAT’S INSIDE
Forty-four pages, in two parts
Part one: The Mindset
Seven small shifts to make before you ever pick up the menu.
How to walk in so the room receives you instead of seating you out of the way.
What to wear, and why the room reads it in about three seconds.
How to order so you're a regular on your first night.
The phone rule, and the first ten minutes that decide the whole dinner.
The ritual the hour before, the one that changes who walks through the door.
Where to sit, and why the seat changes the dinner more than the menu does.
Part Two: The Destinations
Thirteen cities and islands where I've actually dined alone, and the rooms I trust most in each one.
Santorini, Amsterdam, Tampa, Miami, New York, Zakynthos, Corfu, Athens, Casco Viejo, Isla Palenque, Paris, London, and Barcelona.
For each: where I dined, what I ordered, and where to stay.
Plus the booking toolkit, the reservation email I actually send, and a closing reflection, A Table for One.
Who this is for
The woman who wants to travel alone but isn't sure she'll feel at ease doing it.
The woman who's booked the trip after a milestone, a birthday, a win, a new chapter, and wants the dinners to feel like a gift, not a hurdle.
The solo traveler who wants the experience elevated, not just survivable.
Anyone learning to enjoy her own company at the table.
Why this is different
Most travel guides are written from a desk, by someone who has never sat alone at the table they're recommending.
This one was written by a woman who has actually been alone in the room. Thirteen of them, in thirteen cities, in the seat I'm telling you to ask for. Every shift in these pages I learned the slow way, one dinner at a time, so you don't have to.
The guide is new.
The standard behind it is not.
Here is what women say after I've planned the real thing for them.
One more thing
Every hotel in the guide is bookable through the provided link.
You pay the same nightly rate as booking direct, with complimentary breakfast, a room upgrade when one's available, and a hotel credit on arrival. A gift from the hotels for booking through my advisory. A single stay can return many times what the guide costs, before you've eaten your first dinner.
Frequently Asked Questions
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A forty-four page guide, delivered to your inbox the moment you check out. It's yours to keep. Read it on your phone, your tablet, or printed and tucked into your carry-on.
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Especially for you. I wrote it for the first time, not the fifth. Part one walks you through everything before you ever pick up the menu, so the first night feels like something you've already done once.
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No. The mindset travels anywhere there's a table. The thirteen destinations are the bonus, the exact rooms I trust, for when your trip does land in one of them.
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No. The skills at the table hold whether you arrive alone or with the people you love. Plenty of women buy it for the way it changes how they plan every trip, not only the solo ones.
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Never required. The guide stands on its own. But every property inside is bookable through my advisory at the same nightly rate you'd pay direct, with breakfast, a room upgrade when available, and a hotel credit on arrival. The choice is always yours.
Instant digital download. Read on your phone, tablet, or laptop. Created from real travel experiences.
You don’t have to figure this out alone.