She recently admitted in an interview that she has stopped reading comments on her posts and has delegated promotional tasks to a very minimal team. Her "new lifestyle" includes a strict digital boundary: no phones in the bedroom and no social media after 8 PM.
She has publicly endorsed "forest bathing" (Shinrin-yoku) and practices a form of martial arts adapted for women's self-defense. Her entertainment schedule now revolves around her wellness clock, not the other way around. If a shoot requires her to work past 10 PM, she turns it down. This boundary has shocked producers but has earned her the respect of a new generation of actors who see her as a trailblazer for labor rights in cinema. Finally, let’s talk about the visual transformation. In her new lifestyle, Parvathy has abandoned the heavy makeup and designer gowns for handloom cotton sarees, oxidized jewelry, and bare-faced confidence. During a recent promotional tour for a Malayalam indie film, she wore the same pair of kolhapuri chappals for three different interviews.
For fans, watching her is no longer just about watching a movie; it is about adopting a mindset. She teaches us that the best entertainment you can curate is the one that doesn't exhaust you, and the best lifestyle is the one that feels like home.
Slow living as resistance. By rejecting the 24/7 hustle culture of Bollywood and Mollywood, Parvathy is redefining what success looks like for a leading lady in her forties. Her lifestyle now prioritizes circadian rhythms over call sheets. The Digital Detox and Curated Chaos One of the most surprising aspects of Parvathy’s new entertainment approach is her strained, almost antagonistic relationship with the traditional "star machine." While many actors are chasing TikTok trends and Instagram reels, Parvathy has stripped back her digital presence.