In an era defined by constant notifications, social media updates, and relentless schedules, Formula 1 champion Max Verstappen and his partner Kelly Piquet made an unusual decision: they turned off their phones for an entire week.
No texts. No emails. No cameras. Just them.
After the Austrian Grand Prix, Max and Kelly retreated to a secluded cabin in the Swiss Alps — a place with no cell signal and no Wi-Fi. It wasn’t a PR move or a paid collaboration. There were no Instagram stories or paparazzi shots. For seven days, the couple chose to disconnect from the world and reconnect with each other.
Sources close to the couple said the idea came from Max himself. “He’s been carrying a lot lately,” one confidante shared. “The pressure, the spotlight — even for someone as calm as Max, it adds up. He told Kelly, ‘I just want to remember what silence feels like. And I want to share that silence with you.’”
The days were filled with long hikes, shared breakfasts cooked over an open fire, and quiet evenings spent reading and talking. One evening, Kelly reportedly wrote in her journal: “We haven’t spoken to anyone but each other in three days. And somehow, I’ve never felt more heard.”
When they returned, they didn’t post a photo or announce their retreat. But those who saw them after noted a change — a softness, a calm.
“They were glowing,” a friend said. “It was like the outside world hadn’t touched them in a while.”
In a world obsessed with speed, Max Verstappen — the fastest man on the track — found something rare: stillness. And beside him, Kelly Piquet found something even rarer: uninterrupted presence.
Maybe that’s the real victory.