Someone asked me this recently, and the specificity of it stuck with me: “My fever broke yesterday morning. Can I run tonight?” Not when will I feel normal again. Not when will I have energy back. When can I run, because there’s a 10K in eight days and the training is already falling behind. The …
Month: June 2026
A client messaged me a few weeks after recovering from the flu, convinced she had caught something new. Her fever was gone. Her body aches had cleared. Her energy was mostly back. But she was still coughing, every day, sometimes into fits that left her breathless, and she had already called her doctor’s office twice …
The misconception I kept running into, year after year, was this: food is the slow route, and supplements are the shortcut. People would arrive at their health consultations having already spent $80 on a recovery kit containing zinc, elderberry, vitamin C tablets, and two things they couldn’t pronounce, and then ask what else to add. …
The body’s recovery timeline is longer than the symptom timeline. That’s not a caveat — it’s just how it works. Here are the five patterns that slow things down without anyone realizing it. The number of times I’ve seen someone return to their normal routine after three days of bed rest, assume they’re fully recovered, …
The number of times I’ve heard someone say their immune system must be “weak” because they got sick, I’ve stopped counting. It comes up constantly. And right behind it is the flip-side assumption: that if you could just “boost” your immunity somehow, you’d stop getting sick. Both ideas get it backwards. A fever isn’t your …
Around 40% of American adults are clinically deficient in vitamin D. Not just “a little low.” Deficient. And during the winter months, that number climbs meaningfully for anyone living above approximately 35 degrees north latitude, which covers the majority of the United States, all of Canada, and most of Europe. The part that keeps surprising …
Researchers checked volunteers into a hotel, measured their stress levels, dripped actual cold viruses directly into their nostrils, and then monitored them closely for five days. What determined who got sick wasn’t hygiene habits. It wasn’t age or baseline health. It was stress. The people who reported higher psychological stress before the experiment were significantly …
The misconception I keep running into is that six hours is basically fine and a longer sleep on the weekend fixes whatever accumulated during the week. I hear this from people who genuinely care about their health, who are not dismissing sleep as a priority. They’re operating on an outdated mental model of what chronic …
In a 2015 study published in the journal Sleep, researchers exposed 164 volunteers to rhinovirus directly via nasal drops, then monitored who actually got sick. Participants who reported sleeping fewer than 6 hours a night were 4.2 times more likely to develop a clinical cold than those sleeping 7 or more hours. Not 20 percent …
The man who proved handwashing saves lives died in a psychiatric institution at 47. His colleagues thought he was a crank. That detail always stops me. I spend a lot of time with health research, and I’ve come across plenty of findings that took decades to be taken seriously. But the story of Ignaz Semmelweis …










