If someone came to me and said:

"I'm busy. I'm overwhelmed. I have limited time and mental bandwidth. What actually matters?"

Here's what I'd keep. And what I'd cut without hesitation.

First: what I'd remove immediately

Before we talk about priorities, let's talk about noise. I'd cut:

Not because these things are useless in principle. But because they distract from the few levers that move almost everything else.

Longevity is not won by stacking. It's won by consistency.

If you only had time for three things

After years in this space, if forced to simplify, I'd anchor everything around three fundamentals. Everything else is (mostly) secondary.

1. Sleep (non-negotiable)

Sleep is the foundation that makes all other interventions either work or fail. Poor sleep:

No supplement compensates for chronic sleep deprivation. No protocol overrides it.

If sleep is broken, everything downstream is distorted. If I had to simplify:

That alone fixes more "health issues" than most people want to admit.

2. Nutrition + movement (together, not separately)

I'm grouping these intentionally. Why? Because they interact. Nutrition without movement leads to less progress. Movement without adequate nutrition leads to breakdown.

What matters here isn't perfection. It's direction:

This preserves muscle mass, metabolic flexibility, bone density, and mitochondrial function. You don't need extreme diets or perfect macros. You need repeatable behavior that holds up for years.

3. Recovery & stress management (the most underrated lever)

This is the one most people ignore. And then they wonder why nothing works.

Stress isn't just psychological. It's a biological load. Chronic stress:

You can eat well and train hard and still decline if recovery is broken. Recovery is an active process. That includes:

Most "plateaus" are recovery problems.

Why this works

These three areas — sleep, nutrition & exercise, recovery & stress management — control the majority of variance in:

They also determine whether advanced tools help or hurt. If these are weak, optimization becomes noise. If these are strong, almost everything else compounds.

The real takeaway

Longevity fails because we try to do too much. Ruthless prioritization beats perfect protocols. Every time.

If you're overwhelmed, don't add. Subtract. Build a system that protects these three pillars. Then — and only then — layer in complexity if needed.

See you soon,
Niko