Gwyneth Paltrow invented a new thing: walking around outside without shoes

The more I write about Gwyneth Paltrow these days, the more it feels like one of us me or Gwyneth is doing some kind of mega-commentary on the absurdity of the world. Is Gwyneth basically a parody of herself at this point? Is Goop just an elaborate satire? Is Gwyneth chuckling into her

Gwyneth Paltrow Attends Smartwatch Launch Event In NYC

The more I write about Gwyneth Paltrow these days, the more it feels like one of us – me or Gwyneth – is doing some kind of mega-commentary on the absurdity of the world. Is Gwyneth basically a parody of herself at this point? Is Goop just an elaborate satire? Is Gwyneth chuckling into her goat-milk-and-panda-tears smoothie because the peasants are actually buying what she’s selling? I have no idea at this point. Just in the past few months, we have heard that Gwyneth won’t eat octopi because “octopus are too smart to be food.” We’ve heard that we should take medical advice from a professional ghost-whisperer. We’ve heard that we should stick a jade egg up our lady-business too. So what is Gwyneth’s latest advice? She has a no-prescription cure for insomnia and depression: walk around barefoot. It’s called “earthing.” I sh-t you not.

For many of us, our first reaction upon realizing that we’re suffering from insomnia and/or depression is to seek psychiatric or pharmaceutical help. But the time has come for us to ask ourselves: Why go for those proven treatment methods, when taking off our shoes and walking around barefoot might just do the trick, as Gwyneth Paltrow’s Goop suggests?

The lifestyle website that wants us to drink raw goats’ milk and shove a jade egg up there would also like us to try a new trend called “earthing,” which involves walking around barefoot to connect to the energy of the planet. Although people have been walking around without shoes since before shoes were invented, practicing “earthing” stems from the belief that “access to the abundant supply of free electrons in the (subtly negatively charged) ground can help neutralize free radicals — if only we would take off our shoes and access them.”

Paltrow herself apparently swears by earthing — which is also called “grounding” — and members of the Goop community believe it can help with inflammation, arthritis, insomnia, depression, and more. So, to learn more about the barefoot trend, Goop interviewed Clint Ober, an “earthing-movement leader” who worked in the cable-television industry for 30 years.

According to Ober, the “most natural method” of grounding (or earthing) is to take your shoes off and walk around outdoors on the ground. However, the showbiz veteran noted that “walking barefoot in your home … will not have the same effect.”

Luckily, it turns out you actually can ground yourself indoors — by purchasing one of three kits linked to in the Goop article, each of which comes with a mat and electrical cord and ranges in price from $29.99 to $199.99. But what’s $199.99 if it cures your insomnia?

[From NY Magazine]

Note that the advice isn’t simply, “take off your shoes and go outside for some fresh air.” No, Gwyneth has to cloak that relatively simple advice in fake science and bulls–t New Age terminology. It’s NOT grounding or earthing, it is WALKING AROUND OUTSIDE WITHOUT SHOES. People have been doing it LITERALLY since we became homo sapiens.

What’s next for Gwyneth? She’s going to invent a completely new thing called Vitaminizing in which she’ll suggest people consume healthy veggies to get their necessary vitamins. Then she’ll invent Conscious Unconsciousness, wherein she’ll suggest tired peasants lie down on some kind of flat surface and close their eyes so they can do this newfangled thing called “sleeping.”

Gwyneth Paltrow Attends Smartwatch Launch Event In NYC

Photos courtesy of Fame/Flynet.

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