If you spend any time online, you have probably noticed a pattern. Everything is getting “maxxed.” Protein maxxing. Sleep maxxing. Looks maxxing. Fiber maxxing. Somewhere along the way, self-improvement turned into a full time job, and a lot of people are quietly burned out on it.
Then a softer trend started showing up on Instagram and TikTok earlier this year. It is called nonna maxxing.
The idea is simple. Instead of grinding toward a more optimized version of yourself, you borrow the rhythm of an Italian grandmother. Long lunches. Homemade food. A walk after dinner. Sitting in the sun with no agenda. Knowing your neighbors. Doing nothing, and being fine with it.
It sounds like a joke, and in some ways it is. But the reason it caught on, especially with people in their twenties and thirties, has very little to do with Italy.
Where the “Nonna Maxxing” Trend Came From
Nonna maxxing gained traction after a February 2026 Instagram post from the skincare brand @tallowtwins. The carousel laid out the “rules” of the lifestyle through a series of images. Mineral water in glass bottles. Cotton nightgowns. Homemade bread. Airing out the bedding. Cooking with real fat and fresh produce. Smiling at strangers. Walking everywhere. Long lunches with friends.
The aesthetic borrows from a romanticized version of Italian grandmother life. Picture a small farm in Tuscany, or a village on the coast, where the days move slowly and the food is good.
One widely shared post summed up the appeal well. “While everyone is doing all this absolutely crazy stuff to live longer, there’s a 102 year old nonna in a coastal village in Italy somewhere who eats homemade pasta and drinks a glass of wine at dinner every night completely unbothered.”
That idea landed for a reason.
Why People Are Paying Attention
The nonna in the coastal village is not doing anything mysterious. She is not biohacking. She is not tracking her sleep scores. She is living at a pace that a human nervous system can actually sustain.
That is the part worth taking seriously.
Speaking to Newsweek, psychotherapist Doriel Jacov put it this way. “Many Gen Z and younger adults have been deeply impacted by years of constant digital stimulation and a culture that emphasizes productivity. This trend reflects a deep desire for simplicity and emotional connection in a world that often feels overwhelming and unstable.”
Translated plainly, people are tired.
Chris Taylor, owner of Taylor Counseling Group, sees it in his practice every week. “A lot of what I’m hearing in sessions right now isn’t a specific crisis. It’s a low grade exhaustion people can’t quite name. They’re doing everything they’re supposed to do, and they still feel behind. When a trend like this catches on, it’s usually because it’s naming something people have been feeling for a long time.”
What the Nonna Maxxing Trend Is Actually Pointing At
Strip away the linen aprons, the glass bottles, and the Instagram filters, and what is left is a list of habits mental health professionals have been recommending for years. The trend just made them photogenic.
1. Eating with people
A long lunch is not a productivity hack. It is an act of attention. Sitting down at a table, tasting your food, and talking to the person across from you has a regulating effect on the nervous system that scarfing lunch at your desk does not.
2. Movement that is part of life
Walking to the store. Taking the stairs. Carrying your own groceries. Gardening. If your day already has motion in it, you do not need a six a.m. boot camp to be well.
3. Cooking real food
Making something with your hands and handing it to someone you care about is a grounding experience. The process is as much the point as the meal.
4. Knowing your neighbors
Loneliness is now classified as a public health concern. The nonna ideal is the opposite of it. Small daily interactions, a few people who know your name, a sense of belonging to a specific place. If you do not have that, you may need to build it on purpose, but the work is worth it.
5. Actually resting
The Italians have a phrase, dolce far niente, which translates to “the sweetness of doing nothing.” It exists because doing nothing is a legitimate part of being human. Your nervous system needs it.
6. Letting seasons be seasons
Tomatoes in February taste like water. Life feels similar when every week is the same shade of busy. Food, social energy, work intensity, and rest are all meant to ebb and flow. When everything is available all the time, nothing feels like anything.
A Note of Caution
Nonna maxxing is still, structurally, a trend. And wellness trends have a habit of turning into one more standard people feel behind on.
You do not need to recreate someone else’s fantasy of slow living. You do not need to move to Italy. You do not need to start fermenting things. The overarching idea is rooted in the opposite of performing.
Chris Taylor puts it this way. “If slowing down starts to feel like another task on your to do list, you’ve missed the point. This isn’t about doing more. It’s about doing less, and being okay with less.”
How to Start Without Overhauling Your Life
If any of this is speaking to you, do not try to flip everything at once. You will burn out on the concept of slowing down, which would defeat the purpose.
Pick one thing this week. That is it.
- Eat one meal without your phone on the table.
- Walk somewhere you would normally drive.
- Call a family member instead of texting.
- Make one thing from scratch. Bread, soup, a pot of sauce. The process is the point.
- Sit outside for fifteen minutes with nothing in your hands. No podcast. No phone.
- Say hello to a neighbor whose name you do not know yet.
None of these will change your life on their own. A few of them, repeated over weeks, can shift how your days feel.
So What is Nonna Maxxing Really About?
Nonna maxxing hit a nerve because people are not actually longing for Italy. They are longing for a version of their own life that is not constantly sprinting. They want to feel like their days belong to them. They want to eat without rushing. They want to stop feeling vaguely behind on everything.
That is not a trend. That is a basic human need, dressed up in a pretty aesthetic because aesthetics travel well online.
If you have been feeling pulled toward something slower and smaller, that is worth paying attention to. And if the exhaustion you are carrying feels heavier than a busy season, it may be worth talking to someone. Burnout has a way of dressing up as normal life until something breaks.
You may not need a better productivity system. You may just need a life that fits you.
Find Support With Taylor Counseling Group
If you are navigating burnout, anxiety, or the pressure of keeping up, a professional counselor can help you sort through what is situational and what needs deeper support. The therapists at Taylor Counseling Group work with individuals and families across Texas. Our counselors offer in-person sessions at locations throughout the state, along with telehealth appointments for clients who prefer to meet virtually. Whatever slowing down looks like for you, we can help you find a pace that actually works.
Contact us today to book an appointment with a professional counselor at Taylor Counseling Group.



