Physical Health Is Operational Readiness
Resilience is not purely psychological.
Physical readiness strengthens mental resilience by improving the brain’s ability to regulate stress and sustain performance. Sleep, exercise, and nutrition influence cognitive performance, emotional regulation, and recovery. Moderate and sustainable positive change in these three pillars lead to habits that positively affect initiatives throughout your life.
Unfortunately, first responder schedules often disrupt these habits. Shift work and long hours make consistent routines difficult.
For a long time, I viewed my early-morning workouts as selfish. I felt that time might be better spent completing administrative tasks before the day began.
Eventually, I realized that physical training improved my patience, focus, and productivity throughout the day. It also allowed me to model readiness for the people I worked with.
Earlier, I discussed the balance between work and love—the ability to contribute meaningfully to society while maintaining meaningful relationships. To excel in both areas, you need the energy/capacity to work and to love well.
Physical readiness supports mental resilience, operational performance, and healthy relationships.
Sleep, nutrition, and exercise are necessities, not luxuries—essential to meaningful contribution and to maintaining the relationships that sustain it.
Actionable Items
- Prioritize sleep whenever operational schedules allow. For example – Stop scrolling and close your eyes.
- Maintain consistent physical training habits. For example – Start every day with some sort of calisthenics (I love a few burpees)
- Fuel your body properly to support performance. For example – opt out of the sugary treat.
- Treat physical readiness as a personal and professional responsibility. Your friends, family, and peers will appreciate the impact it’ll have on your efforts and attitude.
