Doing nothing, beautifully: chasing fjaka on a Croatian island

On the remote Croatian island of Lastovo, time slows to a standstill. Beyond the reach of crowded beaches and noisy resorts lies a meditative practice known as fjaka—a uniquely Dalmatian concept that resists translation but embodies effortless stillness. As travelers seek meaning in mindfulness, perhaps the quiet of Lastovo offers something even rarer: the luxury of simply being.

What exactly is fjaka?

It begins, fittingly, in a bar. On the seafront of Dubrovnik, over beers at Beach Bar Dodo, a friend introduces fjaka—pronounced fee-aka—as a personal project. “Perfecting my fjaka,” he calls it. No plans, no urgency. Just time melting into itself. While inland Croatians may joke about the laid-back lifestyle of the Dalmatian coast, such remarks miss the deeper essence. Fjaka is not laziness; it’s intentional idleness. A cultivated stillness that draws from sun, sea, and the rhythm of nature.

With no better itinerary in mind, I set off in search of this elusive state. The journey takes me to Lastovo, Croatia’s second-most remote island and a place seemingly suspended in time. Once a closed-off naval base, Lastovo is now a protected nature park—celebrated for its untouched wilderness and profound silence. Some call it the last Mediterranean paradise. I’m hoping it’s also fjaka’s spiritual home.

Lastovo’s hush and hum

Arriving by ferry, Lastovo looks unchanged since the days of ancient sailors. There are no cruise terminals or sprawling resorts—just pine-covered hills and a glassy bay. The island’s only bus, a battered people-carrier, delivers me to Pasadur, its modest “resort.” My accommodations are at Hotel Solitudo, a relic of Yugoslav tourism given a light modern makeover. Two restaurants, a kayak kiosk, and some concrete jetties that locals insist on calling beaches—it’s hardly glamorous. But that’s the point.

What Lastovo lacks in traditional holiday appeal, it makes up for in atmosphere. Days pass in gentle rhythms. I swim in jewel-toned water. I read. At night, I sit with my feet in the sea, enveloped by the smell of sun-warmed pines. Above me, a sky blistering with stars—thanks to zero light pollution—casts its spell. The island is vying to become Europe’s first official Dark Sky Sanctuary.

And yet, this isn’t quite fjaka. “You’re still doing things,” says Diana Magdić of the Lastovo Tourist Board. “Reading, swimming—too active.” True fjaka, she insists, is a mental pause. “It’s not thinking. Just being. Just the heat and the cicadas.” She speaks from experience, having left the bustle of Zagreb to settle here. “People on the mainland don’t understand. But on Lastovo, you can hear the quiet.”

Time unspools like fishing line

I explore the island at a slow hum, renting a scooter to glide between coves and hills. At Lučica, former fishermen’s homes perch above crystal shallows; in Zaklopatica, I linger over a long lunch—grilled fish and local wine—at Triton, a terrace restaurant cantilevered above the sea. It’s idyllic, but not yet fjaka. Then I meet Ivica Lešić.

A local fisherman, Ivica partners with the World Wildlife Fund to run summer boat trips that combine ecotourism with conservation. “This is my boat,” he says, gesturing vaguely toward a gleaming gulet. He clambers aboard, then down into a smaller plastic tub tethered beneath. His wife Helena waves from under a canvas awning. It’s part theatre, part lifestyle—pure Lastovo.

We glide between deep blue bays, nets yielding bonito, scorpionfish, and silver-striped barbona. Eventually, we drop anchor in a secluded cove. A griddle hisses to life. Lunch is whatever we’ve just pulled from the sea, doused in homemade olive oil, paired with fennel bread and rakija brandy. The sea laps gently at the hull. The air thickens. Time loses its grip.

The quiet question Lastovo asks

After lunch, the conversation slows to murmurs. “Fresh fish. Wine. Heat,” Ivica muses. “You can just sit. Do nothing.” Fjaka, at last, settles over us—not as a decision, but as a default. In that lull, something becomes clear: fjaka isn’t found by chasing it. You drift into it, the way waves reach shore.

But how long will this stillness last? More visitors discover Lastovo each year. There are rumors of a second hotel. Some locals want development; others fear losing the very thing that makes the island unique. The bigger question might be ours: do we even know how to relax anymore? Lastovo doesn’t offer distractions or spectacle. It offers space—mental and physical—to stop striving.

“Lastovo is nothing special,” Ivica shrugs. “Just simplicity. Liberation.” But maybe that’s what makes it rare. As the cicadas drone and the boat sways gently, we lapse into silence. It’s not boredom. It’s fjaka. And it might just be the truest form of luxury left.

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