Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Life

From gossip to growth: The wellness trends grabbing celebrity attention

Perez Hilton, a longtime fixture in celebrity media known for his outspoken commentary, has spoken openly in recent years about re-examining his approach to personal well-being. He recently described spending a year working with neurographics through Mindful line. The creative wellness mental health method is piquing the interest of celebrities looking for alternatives to traditional modes of support. 

Photo courtesy of Mindful Line Club photo archive.
Photo courtesy of Mindful Line Club photo archive.
Photo courtesy of Mindful Line Club photo archive.

Opinions expressed by Digital Journal contributors are their own.

Perez Hilton, a longtime fixture in celebrity media known for his outspoken commentary, has spoken openly in recent years about re-examining his approach to personal well-being. He recently described spending a year working with neurographics through Mindful Line Club. The creative wellness mental health method is piquing the interest of celebrities looking for alternatives to traditional modes of support. 

In an interview, Hilton recalls hitting a personal wall and looking for ways to address stress and stalled goals. 

On giving it a try, he explains, “At first, it was just out of curiosity, and to be honest, I was skeptical. Drawing on paper seemed like something kids do. But then, I got hooked on the process, and I started noticing changes.”

Over time, Hilton credits the process for helping him see specific patterns in his life from a different angle. 

Supporters, skepticism, and mental health boundaries

While experiences vary for everyone, proponents often report feeling lighter, more focused, or more open to opportunities after a series of sessions. At the same time, mental health professionals typically caution that drawing-based approaches should go alongside established care, not replace it.

Clinical treatment, medication, and crisis support remain the backbone of managing many conditions. Methods like Mindful Line may offer another space for reflection or stress relief. However, it is important to note that while the method can be beneficial to some people, it is not therapy, treatment, or mental health care.

Mindful Line is not a substitute for professional mental health support, diagnosis, therapy, or crisis care, and it is not intended to replace or be used in place of existing mental health treatment.

What sessions actually look like

According to participant accounts, a typical Mindful Line Club session remains simple on the surface. People sit down with paper and markers and follow instructions on where to place lines or shapes. Then, they round corners, add connections, and fill in spaces with color. The repetition can feel meditative for some, especially for those who struggle with silent, eyes-closed practices.

Others say they enjoy the sense of progress as a drawing slowly turns from tangled lines into something more cohesive. For some, the appeal is part process and part reflection time.

Photo courtesy of Mindful Line Club photo archive.

Mindful Line’s role in this process

Mindful Line is a place for people who want guided Mindful Line Club sessions rather than piecing things together from scattered online tips. In Hilton’s words, mindful line instructors break down the process in a way that he feels is accessible. 

The studio emphasizes learning the whole method, including its rules and stages, rather than just grabbing a few techniques from social media clips. That focus may appeal to people who already rely on therapy or coaching but want a creative practice they can return to between appointments. While it does not replace professional health, it can serve as a creative outlet feeling lighter. 

Why these stories keep showing up

Part of the reason celebrity wellness stories hold attention is simple visibility. When someone with an extended online history of gossip and conflict starts talking about drawing sessions and emotional checkpoints, it signals that these conversations have moved squarely into the mainstream.

For some people watching this unfold, Hilton’s story feels less like a revelation and more like proof that even the loudest public figures reach for something when life feels jammed. 

It also taps into a growing shift: people mixing traditional care with whatever creative outlet lets them sort through the mess without making a spectacle of it. Art, therapy, movement, medication, or a carefully chosen combination can all be helpful tools in the same toolbox.

The pull of low-barrier wellness routines

Another factor fueling interest in Mindful Line Club comes from a different corner: people seeking a different approach to wellness routines. Long journaling prompts, hour-long meditations, and complex self-help systems can become one more thing to manage. A method built around lines and color can feel easier to approach, especially for people who avoid introspective exercises because they get stuck overthinking every sentence.

The structure also gives people something to do with their hands, which may help when thoughts start racing. Instead of sitting still and trying to clear the mind on command, they can follow a set of steps that keep attention moving without demanding a huge emotional disclosure. That mix of motion and focus may appeal to anyone who prefers simple tools they can use on a couch, a breakdown table, or wherever stress catches up to them. The accessibility is part of the draw.

Photo courtesy of Mindful Line Club photo archive.

 A wider shift toward complex narratives

What’s more telling than any single trend is the way the conversation has opened up. Shame-filled whispers about anxiety or burnout have given way to fuller, more complicated stories, where unconventional practices go alongside familiar ones.

Mindful line falls into that category. It doesn’t stand in for clinical care or promise dramatic change, but it could offer a small pocket of quiet focus on people who struggle with stillness or silence. In a culture that once treated emotional cracks like punchlines, that progress is the first step toward removing the stigma of mental health, prompting more people to seek care instead of feeling ashamed. 

Avatar photo
Written By

Jon Stojan is a professional writer based in Wisconsin. He guides editorial teams consisting of writers across the US to help them become more skilled and diverse writers. In his free time he enjoys spending time with his wife and children.

You may also like:

Entertainment

British actor Luke Newton discussed returning to "Bridgerton" for its fourth season on Netflix. He plays the role of Colin Bridgerton.

Business

Amodei, in his blog post, said the company disputes the legal basis of the action but sought to reassure customers.

Business

For the past 30 years, Halina Krauze has sat atop a 15-metre (49-foot) crane surveying the Gdansk shipyard.

Entertainment

Veteran actor Brian Austin Green ("Beverly Hills, 90210" fame) chatted about his new movie "Golden," which was written and directed by Nick Leisure.