Thereâs a certain clarity to the way Gary Brecka talks about health that just clicks. In a space full of trends and endless ânext best things,â his approach feels refreshingly simple and actually doable.
As a human biologist, longevity expert, and the voice behind The Ultimate Human, heâs built a following by focusing on what truly moves the needle. Less about stacking more, more about getting your body back to doing what itâs designed to do.
That same mindset is what led to his partnership with Cymbiotika. Built around a shared focus on quality, absorption, and giving the body the right inputs, the collaboration reflects a more intentional approach to supplementation.
In this edition of The Art of Intentions, Brecka breaks down the non-negotiables. The habits that actually matter, the question most people arenât asking, and the small shifts that can change how you feel day to day and long term.
Thereâs a growing focus on longevity, but much of it still feels abstract. How do you define longevity in a way thatâs tangible and actionable in everyday life?
Longevity is not living longer at all costs. Itâs extending the number of days you feel strong, clear, useful, and painâfree right up to the end. Healthspan over timespan.
Biologically, itâs stability. Stable energy because mitochondria are fed and not inflamed. Stable mood because circadian timing, light, and breath keep cortisol in range. Stable muscle and bone because you load the system consistently. Stable immunity because micronutrient gaps are closed. When systems are regulated, aging slows.
Actionable means you can point to things you can do today and feel tomorrow. Morning light to set the circadian clock, nasal breathing to downshift stress, movement that loads muscle and connective tissue, whole food without ultraâprocessed noise, sleep that starts on time, minerals and essential aminos to cover raw materials. Stack small, repeatable inputs, because identity is built by kept promises, not occasional heroics.
The Ultimate Human has become the #1 wellness podcast. Why do you think your message is resonating so deeply with people?Â
Because we give people levers they can actually pull today and feel tomorrow. Most health content lives in theory; I translate it into actions you can take every single day. Morning light sets your clock. Breath calms your nervous system. Minerals and aminos restore raw materials. Cold and load build resilience. When people run those basics consistently, energy stabilizes, sleep improves, mood evens out, and the fog lifts. Thatâs tangible.
It also resonates because I donât outsource your outcome to genetics or pharma. I spent years predicting mortality; I know which dials move risk in the real world. I show you the mechanism, then the move. We bring elite stories for inspiration, but the playbook is built for everyday life. Simplicity, repeatability, and resultsâwhen people feel their biology respond, they stick with it.
Youâve educated millions on foundational health. What do you think is the most important concept people need to understand first before they try to optimize anything?
Start with regulation before stimulation.
People try to âoptimizeâ by adding more inputsâsupplements, ice baths, HIITâwhen the biology underneath is dysregulated. If your circadian clock isnât anchored, if sleep is erratic, if minerals and aminos are low, if breath is shallow and mouthâdominant, every addâon becomes noise that wonât fix the underlying issue.
Your body runs on timing and raw materials. Light and breath set the clock and the nervous system. Minerals, magnesium, methylated Bs, essential aminos, and clean salt supply the substrates. Sleep on time is the amplifier. Once those are steady, everything else you do finally âsticks.â
Youâve built your work around the idea that small biological inefficiencies compound over time. Whatâs one âsmallâ thing most people overlook that you believe is quietly costing them years of health
Consistent morning light.
Most people obsess over macros, workouts, and supplements while ignoring the input that sets every clock in the body. When your eyes see natural light early, cortisol peaks on time in the morning, melatonin is made on time in the evening, thyroid output steadies, insulin sensitivity improves, and sleep pressure builds properly at night. Miss that anchor and your day drifts: cravings rise, HRV sinks, mood wobbles, and you chase stimulants to compensate. Do this for years and the compound interest is fatigue, weight creep, poor recovery, and accelerated biological aging. Step outside within the first 45 minutes after waking, no sunglasses, let that light hit your eyes and skin, breathe slowly through your nose, and watch how the rest of your biology starts to cooperate.
You focus a lot on repeatable habits. Which protocol has had the most disproportionate impact on your energy and clarity
Morning Reset.
When I lock in first light exposure, breathwork, and a short cold hit before any stimulants, my biology snaps into gear. Light through the eyes sets the clock so cortisol peaks on time and melatonin is made on time later. Three rounds of deep breathwork flood oxygen, build a little CO2 for vasodilation, and flip my mood and focus without jitter. One to three minutes of cold jolts dopamine and wakes the nervous system so I donât chase caffeine all day. That simple sequence stabilizes energy, clears the head, and makes every other tool work better.
Whatâs one protocol thatâs simple, free, and wildly underutilized in your opinion?
Grounding.
Bare feet on natural earth for 10 minutes. Itâs free, itâs portable, and it quietly recalibrates the system. You discharge builtâup charge into the ground, pull in free electrons that help neutralize oxidative stress, and your nervous system downshifts. Pair it with first light and a few slow nasal breaths and youâll feel cortisol smooth out, mood steady, and sleep line up later that night. Itâs the simplest lever almost everyone overlooks, and it works.
Whatâs a question you wish more people would ask about their health?
âIs my biology regulated or just stimulated?â
Most people chase moreâmore supplements, more workouts, more hacksâwhen the core systems arenât steady. If your clock isnât anchored by morning light, your breath is mouthâdominant, sleep is irregular, minerals and aminos are low, and meals fight your circadian rhythm, youâre propping up chaos. Ask that one question, then earn a yes with basics that restore timing and raw materials. When regulation is in place, almost everything else finally works.
What are the non-negotiables in your daily routine that you donât compromise on, no matter how busy life gets
Three things I donât skip, no matter how slammed the day is: first light, breath, and minerals.
I step outside within the first 30â45 minutes after waking and let natural light hit my eyes and skin. That anchors the clock so cortisol peaks on time and melatonin is made on time later. I pair that with three short rounds of deep, nasal-dominant breathwork to oxygenate, settle the nervous system, and switch on focus without chasing stimulants. Then I hydrate with mineralized water before coffeeâclean water, a pinch of fullâspectrum sea salt, and essential aminos, often with molecular hydrogen. That restores raw materials so nerves fire cleanly, muscles relax, and energy is steady.
Finally, What does your current supplement stack look like right now
Right now I'm running a focused morning stack built around raw materials and cellular energy. I start with Baja Gold sea salt and H2 tabs in mineralized water to restore electrolytes and flood the cells with molecular hydrogen before anything else. Perfect Aminos gives the body all nine essential amino acids it can't produce on its own the literal building blocks for muscle repair, neurotransmitter function, and recovery. Cymbiotika NAD+ restores the coenzyme your mitochondria run on, which declines with age and is central to how efficiently your cells produce energy. And creatine closes it out not just for muscle, but for the brain. It regenerates ATP faster under load, which means sharper cognition and better physical output.