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I went on TWO make or break holidays like Jac Jossa & Dan Osborne – one was even my honeymoon… why they don’t work

Published on April 20, 2025 at 09:15 PM

As actress Jacqueline Jossa and husband Dan try to salvage their marriage on a make-or-break trip, Fabulous columnist Kate Wills, 40, warns these hols are not what they’re cracked up to be...

On paper, it should have been honeymoon heaven – three weeks’ island hopping around Indonesia with my new husband.

Kate Wills in a light green blazer and white pants.
Kate Wills warns make-or-break hols are not what they’re cracked up to be
Jacqueline Jossa and Dan Osborne embracing by a pool.
Dan Osborne and Jacqueline Jossa relaxed on loungers in Mexico – just weeks after their split
Photo of Kate Wills in Barcelona with a man whose face is pixelated.
Kate Wills on a trip to Barcelona with an ex boyfriend

To anyone who saw us, we looked like typical newlyweds — smooching on sunloungers, holding hands on sunset walks along white sand beaches, and enjoying romantic candlelit dinners by our own private pool.

And yet less than a year later, we were divorced.

It’s easy to feel romantic on holiday — it’s when you get home that reality bites. I wonder if and are going through something similar following their make-or-break family holiday to to save their eight-year .

The actress, 32, and the former Towie star, 33, looked remarkably loved-up while they soaked up the sun at the Hard Rock Riviera Maya Hotel in Cancun recently.

And yet they were said to have .

The couple — who have daughters Ella, ten, and Mia, six — were already living separately after Dan allegedly bought his own home in secret which “reignited trust issues”;.

Sources close to the pair said Dan had “fallen out of love”; with the former I’m A Celebrity winner, who was reportedly “devastated”; by their split.

Molly-Mae Hague and Tommy Fury at the Love Island reunion.
Molly-Mae Hague and Tommy Fury went on a trip to Dubai with their daughter after their split
Jac Jossa, Dan Osborne, and their two daughters holding bouquets of flowers.
Jacqueline Jossa and Dan Osborne with their kids

They’re certainly not the only celebrities who have hoped that some fun in the sun and a change of scenery might be just the thing to salvage their relationship.

In March, and — who in August 2024 after five years together — went on a trip to with their daughter, Bambi.

Molly-Mae, 25, said in a video on her channel: “It’s obviously not a secret . . . we’re just figuring things out.

“We had a really, really amazing time, probably the best holiday ever for all of us.”;

Last April, , 31, reportedly split from actress girlfriend Taylor Russell, 30, after a make-or-break holiday in , with an insider claiming the pair had hit a “rough patch”; after the trip.

While these new pictures of Jacqueline and Dan’s loved-up PDAs by the pool might make it seem like everything is back on track, aren’t real life.

And I know from experience that a fortnight of sun, sand and strong cocktails simply isn’t enough to heal a relationship that’s fundamentally not working.

I can understand when you’re out of other options and looking for a way to save your relationship that a getaway might seem like the solution.

In fact, one survey revealed 36 per cent of British couples view a holiday as a chance to reconnect with their other half and rekindle their romance.

But they’re a terrible idea because holidays are a bubble — they tell you nothing about whether you work as a couple.

You might think that a break from the stress and strain of life is just what you need to reconnect as a couple, but it’s all just waiting for you back at home

With enough sand, sea and Sangria any two people will get on — it’s when you get home that things start to go downhill.

Although I had an amazing time on my honeymoon in 2017, with hindsight, the cracks were already there.

We’d met when we were 20 on our year abroad from university in , which in itself was a bit like a holiday romance.

We were together for 12 years before tying the knot. Although I had doubts about walking down the aisle, I told myself it was just pre-wedding jitters. He is now 41 and an academic.

In many ways, our trip highlighted how different we were. He liked going to museums and traipsing around dusty monuments, while I loved lounging on the beach all day.

Harry Styles and Taylor Russell holding hands and coffee cups.
Harry Styles reportedly split from actress girlfriend Taylor Russell after a make-or-break holiday
Couple on a tropical honeymoon in Indonesia.
Columnist Kate on her honeymoon around Indonesia with her new husband
Molly-Mae Hague, Tommy Fury, and their baby.
Molly-Mae revealed in a YouTube video: ‘We had a really really amazing time, probably the best holiday ever'

He made fun of our , saying they were inauthentic and full of terrible, rich people, but I thought they were lovely.

And yet while we were 7,000 miles away in paradise, it was easy to push our incompatibility to the back of my mind and just order another cocktail with a mini umbrella in it.

There were certainly plenty of distractions to take my mind off any worries, like spotting Komodo dragons and visiting monkey temples.

We didn’t talk about any of our problems while we were on our honeymoon, and it was easy to keep them out of our minds. Life back home seemed a very long way away.

Band-aid baby

But when we landed back in cold rainy , it became impossible to reconcile how separate our lives had become.

We hadn’t been getting on well for some time, but there was always a reason why — wed-min was stressful, our house were hard, and so on.

After our honeymoon was over and our tans had faded, we had the stark realisation that we simply weren’t right for each other. He wanted to live in and pursue his dream of being an academic. I wanted to live in LA and be a footloose and fancy-free writer.

We had some therapy together, but ultimately I realised we were never going to be right for each other.

I was the one to end things, but it was obvious that we had grown apart — although getting divorced less than a year after getting married was the hardest thing I’ve ever had to go through. I felt I’d lost my best friend and my family, not just my partner.

All the problems we’d had before we got married weren’t magically erased by our lavish honeymoon.

The make-or-break holiday is like the Band-Aid baby — it never works. You might think that a break from the stress and strain of life is just what you need to reconnect, but it’s all just waiting for you back at home.

Expecting one trip away to magically fix a relationship that’s struggling is a recipe for disappointment

Having a good time on holiday can be misleading as it makes you get your hopes up of a reconciliation, when you’re probably just prolonging the inevitable.

Expecting one trip away to magically fix a relationship that’s struggling is a recipe for disappointment.

There’s a saying that “no matter where you go, there you are”; — and travelling across the world won’t heal any rifts because at some point it’s inevitably time to go home. No wonder enquiries spike in September, after couples attempt their make-or-break holidays.

My honeymoon wasn’t the only ill-fated couple’s holiday I’ve been on, so I should have known better. When I was 22, I had been trying to break up with my boyfriend for weeks.

I was no longer attracted to him, but every time I tried to tell him it was over, he presented me with a reason why I should give it another chance.

I was just gearing up to give the “you’re dumped”; speech when he announced that he had a surprise — a week’s holiday in .

Save the time and cash

He had already booked and paid for everything and I was too much of a coward to tell him how I really felt. Plus, as a skint student I hated to turn down a free holiday.

I’m sure a part of me thought maybe we might have a great time and fall back in love with each other.

But the trip was a disaster from the minute we got to the airport. I have horrible memories of wandering around the Sagrada Familia pretending to be like all the other loved-up couples, when really I wanted to be anywhere but there.

Unfortunately he had made so much effort — organising a private boat trip with champagne, booking intimate — that I felt it was impossible not to play the part of the loving girlfriend.

The stress of pretending to still be in love and happy really took its toll. I remember spending one day by our rooftop pool, crying behind my sunglasses. I was surrounded by genuinely adoring couples, which made the pain worse.

I realised I would have loved to be whisked away to Barcelona on a romantic minibreak — but not by him.

We’d only been back home a few days before the act became impossible to keep up, and I finally plucked up the courage to end things once and for all.

If I were Jacqueline Jossa and Dan Osborne, I’d save the time and cash and invested it in couple’s therapy instead.

It might not be as fun — and you won’t come back with a tan — but at least you might mend your relationship.

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