There is no shortage of health information.
Open your phone, turn on the television, browse social media, or walk through a bookstore, and you’ll find an endless stream of advice.
Most of it isn’t wrong. In fact, much of it is genuinely useful. The problem is that it all competes for the same attention. When every article, podcast, influencer, and advertisement claims to hold another important piece of the puzzle, it becomes increasingly difficult to distinguish the foundational from the optional.
Some people become overwhelmed and stop trying altogether.
Others head in the opposite direction—pursuing increasingly smaller optimizations while overlooking the habits that produce the greatest return.
Health itself hasn’t become more complicated.
The human body hasn’t fundamentally changed.
Our attention has.
Most people already possess a surprising amount of health knowledge.
Ask someone what contributes to good health and you’ll likely hear familiar answers:
- Sleep
- Exercise
- Eat well
- Manage stress
- Don’t smoke
- Limit alcohol
They’re not starting from zero. The challenge isn’t a lack of information. It’s understanding the hierarchy of that information. Not all health information deserves the same amount of our attention. Some ideas meaningfully shape health. Others produce modest improvements. Some are only relevant under specific circumstances. And some simply distract from what matters most.
When we lose sight of those differences, everything begins to feel equally important. Ironically, that’s when progress often slows.
Because when everything becomes a priority…
Nothing really is.
Rather than asking, “What’s the best thing I can do?”
a better question might be: “What are the largest things I can influence?”
That distinction matters.
Not everything that influences health is within our control.
Genetics matter. Environmental exposures matter. Access to healthcare matters. Life circumstances matter. Randomness matters.
But many of those variables are only partially—or not at all—under our control.
Instead of chasing complete control over our health, we should focus on maximizing the variables we can meaningfully influence.
Our goal isn’t perfect health.
It’s to consistently move the odds in our favor with the variables we can actually influence.
This idea resembles the logic behind Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs. Before pursuing higher-level goals, we first satisfy the foundation. You don’t build a house starting with the roof. You don’t install drywall before pouring the concrete. The foundation isn’t exciting. But it determines how well everything else performs.
Health works much the same way. There is a difference between building health and optimizing health.
Optimization has become incredibly popular.
Cold plunges. Continuous glucose monitors. Supplement stacks. Longevity protocols.
Many of these have contexts where they may provide value. But they should never compete with the foundation for your time, attention, or energy.
The foundation comes first.
Everything else is built upon it.
For most people, three habits account for a disproportionate share of the health we can actually influence.
The Big Three
- Sleep
- Movement
- Nutrition
Surprised? Probably not.
Good.
This isn’t about introducing something you’ve never heard before. It’s about revisiting familiar ideas and organizing them into a clearer hierarchy.
These aren’t the only things that influence health. They’re simply the best place to start. Because they influence nearly everything else.
Energy. Recovery. Mood. Metabolic health. Hormonal regulation. Cognitive performance. Physical function.
Sleep provides the opportunity for the body and brain to recover, repair, regulate hormones, consolidate memories, and prepare for the demands of the next day.
Movement preserves physical function, improves cardiovascular and metabolic health, strengthens muscles and bones, supports mental well-being, and helps maintain independence throughout life.
Nutrition supplies the energy and building blocks the body needs to function, recover, adapt, and protect itself from disease.
We’ll explore each of these topics in much greater depth throughout the following articles.
Without first addressing the Big Three, trying to identify the source of a health problem can become like searching for the source of a smell in a landfill.
The problem isn’t that the answer isn’t there. It’s that too many variables are competing for your attention before the foundation has been addressed.
The signal is buried beneath unnecessary noise.
Knowing what matters is only half the equation. The other half is understanding how to approach it.
Nearly every practical recommendation we’ll discuss can be filtered through three simple questions:
How well?
How much?
How often?
Or, stated another way:
Quality.
Quantity.
Consistency.
Let’s refer to this as The Health Triad.
This isn’t another rule. It’s a lens. A framework for evaluating nearly every future health discussion.
Whenever new information appears, ask yourself: Is this improving the quality, quantity, or consistency of one of the Big Three? Or is it simply another variable competing for attention?
Health recommendations are built around patterns that consistently help the greatest number of people.
They are probabilities—not absolutes. There will always be exceptions. Some people become ill despite doing almost everything right. Others remain healthy despite years of poor habits.
Individual stories matter. But they don’t replace population-level evidence.
Our responsibility is to make decisions based on what reliably shifts the odds in our favor, while remaining humble enough to recognize that certainty doesn’t exist.
Health information will continue to grow. New supplements will appear. New diets will emerge. New technologies will promise better outcomes.
None of those things are inherently bad.
But they should always be evaluated in relation to the foundation.
When the foundation is strong, optimization becomes more meaningful.
When the foundation is weak, optimization often becomes distraction.
We don’t control every outcome.
We influence the probability of outcomes.
And for most people, very few habits influence those probabilities more than sleep, movement, and nutrition. Everything that follows builds from that foundation.
Health doesn’t become confusing because we know too little.
It becomes confusing because we struggle to distinguish the foundational from the marginal.
The purpose of the Big Three isn’t to tell you everything that matters.
It’s to make sure you never lose sight of what matters most.
To restore hierarchy to the countless ideas competing for your attention.

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