I want to relax so hard. I want to win at serenity. Because, as journalist and author Rina Raphael explains in her new book, âThe Gospel of Wellness: Gyms, Gurus, Goop, and the False Promise of Self-Careâ: âAs Americans, weâre strivers.â Indeed, over the past few years, that ethos has helped fuel an explosively lucrative industry of products and services aimed almost exclusively at anxious, burned out, semi-affluent American women. While the patriarchy is yet to be smashed, maybe a sheet mask and detox diet will serve as a temporary salve.
As a writer, Raphael has been covering the wellness phenomenon for years. She has also, by her own admission, at times embraced it. And the intimate balance she strikes between her skeptical, curious investigation and her honest relationship with consumerism gives âThe Gospel of Wellnessâ its intelligent, emotional punch. She doesnât denigrate women for being influenced by a powerful and persuasive industry; instead she unpacks why modern wellness has become such a juggernaut, and the class and gender dynamics that drive it.
Salon spoke to Raphael about how we got to this place of âfetishizing health,â CBD leggings, and of course, Gwyneth Paltrow and Goop.Â
This conversation has been edited and condensed for clarity.
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I appreciated that you made this book so personal, and acknowledge your own participation in this culture. Even as you are uncovering difficult things, you are also keeping an open mind about why we gravitate toward them.
I see a lot of mocking of women. A lot of, âOh, how can women be so stupid? How can they fall for that?â I definitely have a sneering tone at times, but not at the women who fall for these things, more at the people who are preying on their vulnerabilities and their unhappiness with certain aspects of modern life. It was important for me to include myself because Iâm the same as anyone else whoâs fallen for these things. Itâs not necessarily their fault. Thereâs a lot of misinformation in mainstream media as well. Thereâs a bunch of stuff that doesnât just come from influencers or Goop. Youâll find it in top publications.
And the consequences for women of not keeping up personally and socially are intense. Your own story starts eight years ago.
I had found myself constantly exhausted or dealing with pressures either within the dating scene or within the media industry, where I felt like I had to keep up with a certain pace of life. I had to have a fit body. I had to eat âclean.â I had to do all these things that at the time, I didnât realize how I was being targeted.
I give an example in the book, where I say if you type in the word âtoxicâ in a womanâs publication website, youâll get thousands of articles about âThis is toxicâ and âThat is toxic.â âYou have to clean out your refrigerator and you have to clean out your beauty pots.â Type in the word âtoxicâ in a manâs website, and youâll get one or two articles, and the word âtoxicâ is in reference to a manâs relationship to his boss.
Weâre constantly being told we need to be better. We need to optimize. All these things which are usually exaggerated or misconstrued, but also itâs always on women. I didnât realize that, and I basically got disordered eating. I felt exhausted. At a certain point, I realized that wellness wasnât helping me as much as either holding me back, giving me chemophobia. I was terrified of anything that had, quote unquote, âchemicals,â without even understanding what an absurd statement that is, because everything is made of chemicals. It was adding more pressures to my life. At a certain point I just spun out.
Iâm like many women. You buy a whole bunch of stuff because you see it in magazines or some influencer advocates for it. You say, âThis will make me feel better. Iâll buy this CBD cream. This will help.â And you try it and it doesnât do anything and you get a little bit wiser, and you donât drink the Kool-Aid as much and you have a more critical eye when it comes to marketing. There was that aspect as well where I just tried so many things that I was promised would make me feel so much better and sleep better, X, Y, Z. Then youâre like, this is just snake oil.
The second part of my journey was I was a full-time wellness industry reporter. I touted a lot of companies that now I realize are quite problematic, but I was working for a business magazine. Itâs not that we donât care about science. Itâs just that itâs really secondary. We care about profit growth. We care about innovative marketing campaigns. That was really more of the focus. It was also at a time where we were more susceptible to Silicon Valley and to brands and founders. Media, especially after Theranos, wised up a bit. What ended up happening is that I would do a piece on some company or some trend, and I started getting called out by scientists and doctors on social media saying, âWhy would you write this piece?â
Iâd be like, âWhat? Itâs clean beauty. We all agree. Right? Clean beauty. Our face wash is trying to kill us. Right?â Theyâd be like, âWhat are you talking about? Did you speak to any toxicologist for this piece?â Iâd respond something like, âWell, I spoke to a dermatologist.â Theyâd say, âBut a dermatologist doesnât know anything about toxicology.â I realized that I wasnât doing the homework I thought I was, and this is a problem throughout all of mainstream media right now.
âWellness is treated like fashion in the media. Itâs not put upon reporters to investigate.â
I know we love to say misinformation is just with Joe Rogan, but it really is everywhere. Thatâs because wellness is treated a lot like fashion in the media. Itâs not put upon reporters to investigate these claims. We just take it as a given. âOf course organic is better. Of course clean beauty is necessary.â Thatâs how we then basically uphold this industry that is having consequences that are not great for women. Itâs stressing them out. Itâs getting them obsessive consumerism. Itâs telling them that if they get cancer, itâs because they didnât buy the right foods or buy the right products. And thatâs toxic.
I love in the book how you note the response when a woman says, âI have too much to do.â It gets punted back to women as, âYou need to figure something else out now. You need self-care.â As you said, the solution for the problems in womenâs lives is not to give them have more tasks, not to tell them to problem solve more and strategize more.
Itâs so true. A lot of people see the subtitle of the book and theyâre quite offended. They say, âWell, whatâs wrong with self-care? That seems like a toxic idea.â I say, no, itâs the way weâre being sold self-care, which is that instead of looking at the root issues of why weâre so stressed, weâre telling people that theyâre stressed because they didnât prioritize enough face masks or bubble baths.
âIf you think youâre stressed because youâre not doing enough yoga, youâre fooling yourself.â
Weâre masking the symptoms, which is exactly the issue that we have with the medical industry. People will tell you to go to wellness because medicine doesnât look at the root issues, which is not true. Thatâs a trope. Then theyâll do the same exact thing with wellness. Itâs becoming just as prescriptive as a medical industry. If you think youâre stressed because youâre not doing enough yoga, youâre fooling yourself. Iâm not saying this is simple, but I give ideas like, go and collect your fellow coworkers and say, âWeâre working too many hours, or stop emailing us after work hours.â Those are the solutions. But instead, weâre just telling women to self-medicate with all this stuff.
It doesnât work in the long run. I think women are finally starting to realize it. In the same vein, I do see sometimes women use self-care as a cover. I give the example of a woman who tells her husband, âI need you to watch the kids because Iâm going to go take it a bath for an hour.â Heâll be like, âWhoa, whoa.â But if she says, âHey, I need to engage in self-care,â heâs like, âOh, well, thatâs mental health. Okay.â Sometimes I think these things can help us. But overall, theyâre not the cure-all that we think they are, and thatâs not what self-care really, really means. Itâs so consumer driven and itâs so productivity connected.
I have been speaking to some adolescent psychologists and therapists who told me that they have all these teen girls who are stressed out that theyâre not taking care of their self-care well enough. Theyâre like, âIâm not doing enough face masks. Iâm not doing enough yoga.â Theyâre stressed about not taking care of their stress well enough. This is what I mean that the industry sometimes harms us in ways that we didnât anticipate. At the same time, Iâm not saying that this entire industry is screwed. Iâm not saying that thereâs not value with being told to take care of yourself and to prioritize fitness and nutrition. Itâs just that the way itâs being sold to us is quite problematic.
They are absolutely proven benefits to prosocial behavior, to physical activity, to eating more fruits and vegetables and less processed food. Itâs not bad to meditate. Itâs not bad to take time for yourself. Itâs not bad to unplug and detach and sleep. So what is the difference, and how has that been monetized and leveraged to the extent that it has exploded in the last decade?
There are a few things that really distinguish the U.S. version of wellness from other countries. Wellness is of course a global interest right now. But what we have in America is unlike anything else. It is not a phenomenon replicated in other ways. Thatâs because we have certain attributes in this country that prime us for the problems we have right now. One is the way we look at wellness as highly individualistic. Itâs on you to fix if youâre stressed or not feeling well.
You donât see this industry telling us to deal with communal solutions or to ask for more support from our government or city plans instead of saying, âNo, itâs your problem.â You are stressed out, even though it could be because you donât have childcare policies or because youâre stressed out about the news, Roe v .Wade, your husband doesnât help, your work emails, whatever it is. Instead they say, âNo, itâs your issue. You need to prioritize yoga.â Thatâs number one.
âAmerica expresses itself through shopping. Thatâs never ever going to change.â
The second is itâs highly consumerist. Listen, America expresses itself through shopping. Thatâs never ever going to change, but this idea that you have to buy all this stuff to be well is just ridiculous. Itâs leading to issues where itâs leaving out certain people, certain groups of people who canât afford all this stuff. Not just afford it. They donât have the time for it.
This is one of the conversations we have. âIf we just give lower income people more access to vegetables then they can lead healthier lives.â Well, they donât have time to prepare it. It takes a lot of time to prepare a fresh, nutritious meal. One of the reasons people like processed food is because itâs easy. If youâre working two jobs, you canât do that. So to tell people, âIf you donât eat clean, youâre going to get sick, â youâre leaving out whole groups of people.
Productivity pressures is the third. Being told you have to do all this stuff is stressing people out. Itâs inciting guilt when theyâre not able to do all this work to be well. Itâs also to some degree fetishizing health. Itâs not just ingrained into your life. Itâs this thing you have to do when itâs this ultimate mission and it becomes your identity. Itâs going too far. That is partially because as Americans, weâre strivers. Itâs spread out the old church and work ethic. We will work so hard for things.
This is what makes America successful. The drawback is that sometimes we apply that productivity ethos to other things in our lives, which can hurt us. Then Iâd say the last is that, weâre dreamers. Weâre the nation that put the man on the moon. Our ancestors ventured out west secure their fortunes. We grew up on these happy Disney endings. We want to believe in the fantastical and the aspirational and unbelievable, including easy fixes in a bottle.
We are the country that can build Hollywood, Silicon Valley. That also means weâre more susceptible to fantasies and sometimes not in the best way. So we will believe a Goop. We will believe some fad diet because weâre such a highly optimistic country, but the drawback, or the flip side, of optimism is gullibility.
Letâs just get into Gwyneth. She is the white hot mass of fiery snake oil in the center of all of this. Itâs not all on her, but she really is the template. And yet, I have one of her cookbooks.Â
The cookbooks are great. I have one too. I love a Goop sale. Listen, some things Goop does right. Iâm the first to admit that.
Whoâs to argue? You look on your site and youâre like, Iâd like to sleep in classy sheets. Iâd like to take a bath in something called âthe martini.â That sounds wonderful. But we know sheâs full of it. Why is she still so successful? Sheâs still able to pivot to âintuitive eating,â âintuitive fasts.â
Sheâs clever as f**k. You cannot deny that she has charm. She really understands her audience. She told Harvard business students she wants to be aspirational. Itâs making health aspirational. Sheâs really clued into a lifestyle. Sheâs very, very smart. She knows exactly what her buyer wants and she gives it to them. And we trust people that we are familiar with more than other people, which is why there are no doctors leading these sort of trends. Gwyneth is an Oscar winner. Sheâs beautiful. She lives on the west coast and has this idyllic life. We believe if we follow the things that she consumes on the inside, we will have what she has on the outside â even though, I assure you, half of that is just genetics.
Thereâs part of that. I also think thereâs sometimes a misunderstanding about Goop shoppers. I say this from having gone, I think, to four of their conferences and doing a lot of research with people who are fans of Goop. They donât take her that seriously. They really prefer stuff like her cookbooks and her beauty stuff. And like you said, her sheets. Sheâs partially entertainment to them, in the same way that medical road shows back in the day had snake oil salesmen. The people who used to attend the snake oil salesman shows knew that he was basically full of it. Some people bought into it, but a lot of people knew it â it was their version of dinner and a movie.
Itâs the same thing with Gwyneth. People know sheâs ridiculous, but itâs fun. Iâm not defending it because there is some danger to looking at health as fun and seeing it as entertainment. But I think people give her more credit than she should have, because if you speak to most Goop followers, theyâre like, âWell, I still go to my doctor. Iâm not going to Gwyneth for health advice. Come on. Iâm here to buy her beauty creams.â
But she does legitimize certain problematic ideas. Adrenal fatigue is one example I give in the book thatâs really, really problematic. And because wellness is being treated like fashion by the media, when she publicizes an idea, a whole bunch of 26-year-old underpaid magazine writers take that and then they publicize it. She does have an influence effect. Thatâs the problem with Gwyneth.
Where do we go from here? You end the book by talking about a more democratization of wellness. These concepts are important and especially in a very polarized country where what I put on my face is my identity.
In terms of the industry, itâs already changing. Of course thereâs misinformation online, and of course companies are always going to target the elderly or parents of sick children. There are always vulnerable populations that are going to be more targeted than the average consumer. But youâre not seeing things like CBD leggings anymore or CBD toilet paper, which are actual products and got a lot of press coverage.
There are two reasons why. One, the consumers are sick of it. The average consumer has too many CBD products lining up on their bathroom counter that didnât work. Theyâre a little bit more critical and theyâre like, âIâm not buying in to the marketing thing any more.â
The pandemic also had people reassess the way they tend to their health, what theyâre doing, and also their health information. We have a consumer thatâs a little bit more jaded. Also, a lot of the things that we depended on that we were obsessed with, like the boutique fitness classes and the green juice, got thrown out during the pandemic. People realized, âI donât really need these things.â
And itâs the influence of Gen Z. Gen Z is not as impressed with Gwyneth. They are not impressed with celebrities. They care more about the experts, and they are rebelling against this Millennial focused productivity mandate where everything has to work so hard and everything has to be picture perfect, the Millennial peak, pink perfection, everything perfectly positioned on your Instagram. They hate that stuff.
Theyâre putting their own spin on it where theyâre like, âIf I want to have Kraft mac and cheese, Iâm going to have Kraft mac and cheese. Everythingâs going to be A-OK. Stop that, Millennial.â Thatâs how theyâre reacting, and the industry is taking note.
Youâre seeing a waning off of the more ridiculous wellness trends. Iâm not saying wellness is going away, but the more ridiculous aspects are basically winding down. Whatâs really interesting is that no one showed up to the Goop cruise. A few months ago, Goop had a cruise. Iâve been to Goopâs conferences and they are packed. I think a handful of people showed up. Goop, I think, is in trouble down the line, and that more ridiculous model is on its way out.
How much of that also intersects with our deepening understanding of diversity, our deepening exhaustion with white supremacy? A lot of this movement symbolizes something that feels even moreoffensive and privileged at a moment in our history where we have to look very hard and long at these issues of who has a seat at the table and who doesnât.
Thatâs something people have really wised up to. Itâs the same thing with people being vocal on social media about how these trends affect them. You see the same thing with science. The influencers used to be Gwyneth and Vani Hari. Now youâre seeing doctors, physicians, scientists become influencers in their own right. Theyâre saying, âHey, what you guys all thought was right or clean or whatever, thatâs really problematic. Thatâs not the truth.â The same thing is also happening in terms of the diversity discussion, where people are coming forward and saying, âYou know what? I feel left out. What you guys are all obsessed with doesnât help my community.â There have definitely been more vocal individuals about the issues inherent within all of this.
You end the book giving some advice we can take with us when we are lured into that aisle of our local Target, that promises some gummies that are going to change our lives. What should we be mindful of? Iâm using wellness words. What we should be thinking about?
Thereâs nothing wrong with the word âmindful.â Just because itâs been co-opted by an industry of apps doesnât mean we shouldnât use that word.
Number one, I wish people would evaluate their root stressors first. Why are you stressed out? Why are you unhappy? Of course we canât control everything. We canât control traffic. We canât control a whole bunch of stuff. But if people address that more than trying to mask it with a whole bunch of products, that would be beneficial. The second is to really evaluate who youâre following and who youâre taking health information from. Is this an expert in their specific field?
If youâre worried about toxicology and ingredients, then maybe you should follow toxicologist. Donât follow a beauty founder or maybe a dermatologist who may not be as versed in those issues. So really follow someone who knows what theyâre talking about. Is this a person who other experts in their field recommend? Is this someone who is trusted? If you are following someone like Vani Hari and a strong portion of the nutrition industry says this person is problematic, maybe look into that. So I see a lot of people taking advice from celebrities and founders and these people donât know anything that theyâre talking about.
Just because you were good in a movie doesnât make you smarter than a doctor. But itâs very seductive. Especially when we are tired and vulnerable and stressed.
The last thing is just how misogynistic this industry is. How come men arenât being forced to eat âcleanâ? My husband doesnât care about his Mitchum deodorant. Why is that? Why do I care? Why am I terrified? Men, because theyâre not exposed to it, are like, âYeah, Iâm not doing that.â
A lot of this industry is based on belief and hope. We take this thing and we think itâs going to transport us to a pure air or weâre going to be happier and healthier and look pretty. Analyze why youâre doing something and what you want to get out of it, and if itâs really going to make you feel better. By the way, I grew up on W magazine and Vogue. I get it. Iâm not lambasting women who want certain things that are told to them by society. But really look at something and wonder if itâs really health and wellness, or if itâs just sucking you back into the cult of productivity or self-improvement.Â
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