Physio Strength Club

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I help high-performing pros in their late 30s–50s who trained hard earlier in life but now feel stiff, niggly, and less resilient — rebuild a pain-free, dependable body without training more, stretching endlessly, or risking long-term joint damage.”

This drink, shared by a Starbucks employee, has over 7 million views on TikTok.I call this “feel like crap syndrome” in ...
23/02/2026

This drink, shared by a Starbucks employee, has over 7 million views on TikTok.

I call this “feel like crap syndrome” in a cup.

We wonder why so many people wake up tired, anxious, foggy, and hungry two hours after breakfast.

Then we start the day with the metabolic equivalent of a birthday cake…
and call it coffee.

This drink likely contains well over 300g of sugar and around 2,000 calories.

When you take in that much rapidly absorbed sugar first thing in the morning:

• Blood sugar spikes hard
• Insulin surges
• Then comes the crash

For many people, that crash feels like: – Irritability
– Shakiness
– Brain fog
– Intense cravings by late morning

Do this most days, and over time it raises the risk of: • Weight gain
• Insulin resistance
• Fatty liver
• Type 2 diabetes

If you want something indulgent, enjoy it consciously
Have it as dessert.
Make it occasional.
Use real, whole foods.
Keep sweetness modest and intentional.

This is an extreme example.

But it’s worth asking:

How common have drinks like this become?

Image credit: rylo4095 / TikTok

23/02/2026

We’re often told:
“Exercise is good for you.”
But rarely told why — in a way that actually changes behaviour.

Recent work shows that regular movement:
• Improves immune surveillance
• Normalises tumour blood vessels
• Reduces chronic inflammation
• Increases mechanical stress in circulation
• Supports muscle as “metabolic armour”

This isn’t motivation talk.
It’s physiology.
Exercise changes the terrain that disease has to operate in.

It doesn’t guarantee anything.
Biology never does.
But it shifts probabilities in your favour — quietly, every day.

If health was framed this way growing up, how differently would most of us train now?

22/02/2026

A fundamental question in ageing science is whether declines in memory and cognitive function are fixed or reversible.
A new paper in Neuron suggests we may have underestimated the brain’s capacity to recover.

Researchers targeted a very specific group of “engram” neurons — the cells that store memory — with a brief pulse of a gene set known to influence cellular youthfulness. In aged mice, this restored memory performance to levels seen in young animals.

This wasn’t about replacing cells or sweeping in stem cells.
It was about tapping latent plasticity already present in the brain.
Applied in a model of Alzheimer’s disease, it even improved learning strategies and long-term recall.

If ageing doesn’t always mean permanent loss, it reshapes how we prioritise long-term resilience and adaptability.

What have you noticed about how ageing shows up — not just as decline, but as altered capacity?

22/02/2026

Walk past most junior sporting fields and you can feel it.
Adults invested.
Outcomes amplified.
Children learning, quietly, that approval is linked to results.
It’s rarely malicious.
It’s cultural.
We’ve normalised early competition, early selection, early labelling.
And then we’re surprised when motivation fades by adolescence.
Norway took a different path.
They removed early scorekeeping.
They delayed specialisation.
They kept sport affordable.
They prioritised enjoyment.
Not to avoid excellence.
To protect it.
They understood that confidence, resilience, and physical literacy compound slowly.

19/02/2026

Too often we separate what are really connected pieces of the same story.

Heart disease is “heart”.
Diabetes is “metabolism”.
Cancer is “something else”.
Brain fog is “too busy”.

But at a cellular level, chronic inflammation and metabolic dysfunction underlie all of them. Quietly, long before clinical labels are applied.

And hormones sit right at the centre of that web, helping regulate inflammation, energy production and cellular repair.

Understanding that isn’t a fad.
It’s a perspective shift that brings coherence to why people can feel “fine” and still be deeply imbalanced.

What’s one symptom you’ve noticed that didn’t make sense until you saw it as part of a bigger pattern?

18/02/2026

Most people think dementia is something that happens late in life.
It isn’t.
The biological processes that make brains vulnerable begin silently in midlife... long before we notice them.

That makes this different from “inevitable decline”.
It means prevention isn’t about luck.
It’s about daily behaviours that build cognitive capacity over time.

Strength training, cardiovascular challenge, sleep quality, and varied mental engagements all create reserve — so your brain has margin when stress arrives.

Not dramatic. Just cumulative.

What routine today is quietly building capacity for years ahead?

17/02/2026

Many people now move through their day surrounded by answers.
Search. Prompt. Summarise. Decide. Repeat.
It feels productive.
It looks competent.
But there’s often a quiet loss underneath it.
Fewer moments of sitting with uncertainty.
Less tolerance for not knowing yet.
Less confidence in your own judgement.
When thinking becomes frictionless, it also becomes shallow.
Over time, that affects how you train, lead, recover, and choose.
The professionals who age best in performance aren’t the fastest to access information.
They’re the most comfortable staying with it.
They reread.
They reflect.
They question what looks “obvious”.
They keep their thinking muscles loaded.

Where in your life have things become so easy that they’re no longer strengthening you?

16/02/2026

The most common form of decline doesn’t announce itself.
It starts decades before you notice it.

Brain networks adapt to sleep loss, sedentary habits, and short bursts of dopamine more than sustained cognitive engagement.

Two quiet truths from the latest Diary Of A CEO podcast discussion:
Alzheimer’s pathology can begin in the 30s, long before symptoms are obvious.

Lifestyle factors - strength, sleep, movement, and deep cognitive engagement — build cognitive reserve, protecting the brain over the long term.

This isn’t fear-mongering.
It’s noticing how everyday habits compound biologically.
Small adjustments today increase your capacity for decades.

Which habits are adding to your reserve…
and which ones are quietly subtracting from it?

16/02/2026

26 Rules to Be a Better Thinker in 2026

My 14 years old nephew and I recently engaged in a debate about the threats of AI.

My mother believes he "put me in my place". I say, she wasn't paying attention and I shut up because we were both guessing at an unknown future.

What we mainly disagreed on was whether AI would be placed in robots who could complete physical work, making having a body attached to a mind redundant.

What I do know for sure is the AI risk is humans surrendering our thinking to it.
The biggest threat to humanity will be if humans do not have the knowledge of the subject area to "check the work" of the AI.

I remember being 19, having to go to the university library to look up primary sources and photocopy them. One paragraph of my uni report could take ten hours of work to write.

That struggle developed patience, discipline, and character.

What if my nephew just had ChatGPT do it for him?

The whole thinking process would’ve been annihilated.

That’s what’s at stake right now.

Not information. Not access. Not speed.

But the slow, frustrating, character-building process of learning how to think.

We live in an age where answers are instant.

But understanding is not.

And the irony is this:

The smarter our tools get, the more dangerous it becomes to outsource our thinking.

AI can give you output. It cannot give you judgment. It cannot give you wisdom. It cannot tell you when it’s wrong.

Only you can do that.

Which is why, in 2026, clear thinking is becoming one of the most valuable skills on earth.

So here are 26 rules for developing it.

1. Take another think

Our first thoughts are often wrong.

Slow down. Question yourself. Assume error.

Even AI needs a second pass.

So do you.

2. Take walks

Some of the greatest thinkers walked daily.

Nikola Tesla made breakthroughs on walks.
Ernest Hemingway walked when he was stuck.
Friedrich Nietzsche believed ideas came from movement.

Your brain works better when your body moves.

3. Embrace contradiction

As F. Scott Fitzgerald said:

A first-rate mind holds opposing ideas and still functions.

Reality is complex. Learn to sit with that.

4. But don’t confuse complexity with nonsense

Holding tension is intelligence.

Holding confusion is not.

Always ask: Does this actually make sense?

5. Go to first principles

Aristotle taught: go to the roots.

Don’t argue headlines. Rebuild ideas from the ground up.

6. Think for yourself

René Girard showed how we copy desires.

Most people don’t think. They imitate.

Don’t.

7. Don’t be contrarian for sport

As Peter Thiel noted:

Opposition isn’t thinking. It’s reaction.

Truth isn’t found by flipping signs.

8. Ask good questions

Isidor Rabi was asked daily:

“Did you ask a good question?”

Questions create mastery.

9. Watch your information diet

Garbage in. Garbage out.

Protect your mind like your body.

10. Go deep

When studying Lincoln, I had to go far beyond surface knowledge.

I read everything. Spoke to experts like Doris Kearns Goodwin and Ken Burns.

Depth creates authority.

Skimming creates illusion.

11. Re-read

Books don’t change. You do.

Return to great ideas.

12. Study people who disagree with you

James Stockdale survived captivity because he understood his enemies’ thinking.

Read “dangerous” ideas.

13. Ego is the enemy

Epictetus warned:

You can’t learn what you think you know.

Humility is intelligence.

14. Beware the Gell-Mann amnesia effect

Named after Murray Gell-Mann.

Media gets things wrong constantly.

You notice it only in fields you know.

Stay skeptical.

15. Be flexible

Winston Churchill respected tradition, not stagnation.

Adapt or decay.

16. Empty the cup

An old Zen lesson:

If your mind is full, nothing fits.

And as Horace warned: A dirty vessel spoils everything.

17. Seek understanding, not trivia

Random facts ≠ wisdom.

Build frameworks. Not collections.

18. Write to think

Michel de Montaigne wrote to discover his thoughts. I post content.

Writing clarifies. Silence obscures.

19. Build a second brain

Collect ideas. Store insights. Return to them.

As Seneca said: turn words into works.

20. Cultivate empathy

If you can’t see through others’ eyes, you see only half of reality.

21. Look at the fish

Louis Agassiz forced students to observe deeply.

Not quickly. Not lazily.

See what’s really there.

22. Find your scene

As Johann Wolfgang von Goethe said:

You become who you associate with.

Choose wisely.

23. Build a personal board of directors

Who challenges you? Who tells you the truth?

No one succeeds alone.

24. Watch your inner child

Notice emotional overreactions.

That’s old pain speaking.

Don’t let it drive.

25. Keep your identity small

From Paul Graham:

Strong identities make weak thinkers.

Stay flexible.

26. Do the work

As Seneca wrote:

No one becomes wise by accident.

No app. No shortcut. No AI prompt.

Only effort.

The Big Idea

AI is not making thinking obsolete.

It’s making it essential.

The future belongs to people who can:

• Interpret
• Question
• Judge
• Synthesize
• Reflect
• Adapt

Tools will keep getting smarter.

So must you.

If this resonated, share it with someone who still believes thinking is optional.

It isn’t.

Not anymore.

15/02/2026

Consistent kindness is one of the clearest signals of real capacity.
Not performative politeness.
Not forced positivity.
Calm, grounded, unhurried decency.
It shows up most in people who sleep well, eat well, move well, and recover properly.
Because emotional regulation is metabolically expensive.
When energy is low: Patience shortens.
Empathy narrows.
Irritation rises.
Cortisol runs high.
Inflammation follows.
Decision quality drifts.
Over time, this becomes “personality”.
“I’m just blunt.”
“I’m under pressure.”
“That’s leadership.”
Often, it’s quiet exhaustion.
Strong systems protect temperament.
Where do you notice your tone changing first when you’re stretched?

12/02/2026

"If you can’t fix it with front squats or omega-3s, it’s probably fatal"

It started as a throwaway line.
People remember it because it points somewhere useful.

Strength and basic nutrition solve more than we expect.
Not directly.
Indirectly.

They stabilise systems.
Muscle protects joints.
Load protects bone.
Omega-3s support inflammation control.
Routine supports recovery.

When those are consistent, resilience rises.
When they drift, small problems multiply.

More aches.
More fatigue.
More sensitivity to stress.
Then we assume something is “wrong”.

Often, it’s just foundations eroding.
No drama.
No diagnosis.
Just maintenance overdue.

Which basics are quietly carrying you right now…
and which ones are being taken for granted?

11/02/2026

Most driven professionals already “do exercise”.
Gym sessions. Programs. Targets. Data.
And yet their bodies still feel tight, flat, and oddly fragile.
Because most of the day is spent motionless.
Chairs. Cars. Screens. Flights. Meetings.
Movement becomes an event.
Not a background condition.
Over time, that separation matters.
The strongest, longest-lasting bodies aren’t built in bursts.
They’re built through thousands of small, unremarkable actions.
Standing more than sitting.
Walking instead of waiting.
Using joints through full ranges without thinking.
No drama. No gadgets. No hacks.
Just a life that doesn’t require “motivation” to stay mobile.
Where has movement become something you schedule…
rather than something you live?

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