Travelling solo is already a lot. Add in a neurospicy brain, and even knowing where to begin can feel impossible. I've been travelling alone since I was a teenager — and over the years, I figured out how to make it genuinely good. Now I help others do the same.
// photo coming soon
I've always loved to travel. The idea of it, the planning of it — actually, scratch that. The planning was never the part I loved. The planning was the part that kept me up at night, paralysed by seventeen browser tabs and a growing sense that I was somehow doing it wrong.
Too many options. Too many variables. Too much to hold in my head at once. And then the trip itself — the sensory chaos of airports, the hotels that looked nothing like the photos, the restaurants I'd researched but forgot to account for how loud they'd actually be.
I'm neurodivergent. I know my brain. And I got tired of travel experiences that were designed for a version of me that doesn't exist.
Most travel agencies are built around the idea that planning a trip is fun. And for some people, it genuinely is. But for a lot of us — the high-performers, the deep-thinkers, the people whose brains are running a dozen processes at once — the admin of travel is just another cognitive load we don't have bandwidth for.
Stillroute is the answer to that. A concierge consultancy that handles every single detail, with a lens you won't find anywhere else. Sensory comfort. Predictability. Zero decision fatigue. One person who knows your preferences and actually uses them.
I built this because I needed it. And because I know I'm not the only one.
Travel should be the part of your life that restores you. Not the part that requires a week of recovery when you get home.
Ashley — Founder, Stillroute// let's work together
Book a free, no-pressure consultation. Tell me where you want to go — I'll take it from there.