There's two parts to the impending sabbatical Ben Smith plans to take. The first is the rejuvenation and invigoration of the country's best back three player.
Smith, who recently turned 31, wants to be an integral part of the 2019 World Cup bid. He wants to ensure he's at his world class best for the remainder of his contract and having been battered for the last 10 years, in which he has played more than 50 tests, 100-plus Super Rugby games, and sevens at the Commonwealth Games, he needs a mini career break to refresh a body that isn't broken but would benefit greatly from some extended time off.
Smith saw how his namesake, Conrad, did much the same thing at much the same age in 2013 - skip the second half of the test season and return to Super Rugby in 2014 with an energy and dynamism that recast him as the world's best centre.
Smith is expected to play the two Bledisloe Cup tests in August and then sign off until Super Rugby next year and as much as his sabbatical is about physical recovery, it will also afford him the opportunity of some kind of normality in his domestic life where he and his wife recently had their second child.
That chance to be at home, to do regularly the things most others take for granted, will essentially be the true value of Smith's sabbatical as it has been with those other players who have taken time out through the same contractual dispensation.