Dr. Kyle Gillett's six pillars of hormone health include the expected (diet, exercise, stress, sleep, sunlight) but also adds spiritual well-being. He argues that even with perfect physical health, a lack of spiritual health will profoundly and negatively impact the body and mind.
Instead of obsessing over "fixing" issues like fatigue or bloating, reframe them as signals from your body. Listening to these cues allows you to understand and address underlying root causes, rather than just masking the symptoms with temporary solutions.
Instead of chasing weight loss, focus on foundational health markers like inflammation, blood sugar balance, stress levels, and nutrient deficiencies. When these systems are optimized, sustainable weight loss and body recomposition often occur as a natural side effect.
Frame your health as five interconnected 'personal wells': physical, mental, emotional, social, and spiritual. According to Christine Platt, the depletion of just one well is enough to make you feel unwell, as it restrains the health of the other four. This model provides a targeted framework for self-assessment and restoration.
When addressing hormone imbalances, start at the base of the "hormone pyramid." Optimizing foundational hormones like cortisol (stress) and insulin (blood sugar) is essential, as they directly impact thyroid function and sex hormones like estrogen and testosterone.
Peak performance requires daily conditioning in four key areas: physical health; emotional well-being (building community); intellectual curiosity (honing your craft); and spiritual fitness (practicing humility). Neglecting one area inevitably weakens the others, making this a holistic framework for long-term success.
Burnout extends beyond mental exhaustion to a measurable physiological state. High cortisol levels provide a "physical manifestation" of chronic stress, reframing burnout from a vague feeling into a tangible health issue. This perspective underscores the importance of physical rest and recovery, not just mindset shifts, to heal.
To ensure holistic and sustainable success, structure your daily non-negotiable habits across three key areas. This simple framework prevents you from over-indexing on work at the expense of your physical and mental health, creating a balanced rhythm of success.
A physician was forced to add "environment" as a third pillar of health after a patient, who perfectly managed her diet and exercise, remained ill due to significant environmental exposures. This challenges the conventional two-pillar model of health.
Money is just one pillar of a happy life. Without physical health, mental well-being, and a spiritual purpose, wealth is meaningless. Financial fitness provides the fuel and freedom to enhance the other areas, but it cannot fix deficiencies in them.
Getting direct sunlight exposure shortly after waking is a powerful biohack for setting your circadian rhythm. The light hitting your retina triggers a hormonal cascade that can increase the crucial morning cortisol spike by 50%. This enhances focus during the day and promotes better sleep that night.