- "Wellness" has become another performance metric — another thing to optimize, compare, feel inadequate about
- Real health doesn't require a 5am routine, a $12 smoothie, or a perfectly aesthetic supplement shelf
- The most sustainable wellness practices are invisible — small daily actions that fit into your actual life, not someone else's highlight reel
The Performance Problem
Scroll through Instagram for 30 seconds and you'll learn exactly what wellness looks like in 2026. It looks expensive. It looks beautiful. It looks like someone who has more time, more money, and more counter space than you. Here's what wellness doesn't look like on social media: taking two magnesium gummies in your kitchen while the coffee brews, wearing yesterday's shirt, with a sink full of dishes in the background. But that's wellness. That's the real version.
Somewhere along the way, "taking care of yourself" got rebranded as "wellness" — and wellness got rebranded as a luxury aesthetic. This version of wellness isn't accessible to most people. Worse, it's alienating. When you can't measure up to the aesthetic, you feel like you're failing at health.
What Real Wellness Looks Like
Two gummies in the morning. No aesthetic. No ceremony. Just magnesium glycinate, because your body needs it.
A walk at lunch that's not a "workout." You're just moving because moving feels better than not moving.
Going to bed at 9:30pm on a Friday. Not because you're boring. Because you're tired. These things don't photograph well. They don't get likes. But they work.
Why Simplicity Wins
The wellness industry profits from convincing you that health is complicated. It isn't. Your body needs sleep. It needs movement. It needs nutrients — including magnesium, which your body can't produce on its own. Supplementation can be part of real wellness when it's approached as a tool, not a status symbol. Two magnesium glycinate gummies a day isn't performative. It's practical. And practical is what lasts.

Frequently Asked Questions
References
- 1. Cederström C, Spicer A. The Wellness Syndrome. Polity Press, 2015.
- 2. Gröber U, Schmidt J, Kisters K. "Magnesium in Prevention and Therapy." Nutrients. 2015;7(9):8199-8226.