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What Is Performance Health?

  • Writer: John Winston
    John Winston
  • Jul 14
  • 6 min read

If we ask most people what performance health means, the answers tend to be physical. How fast can you run? How heavy can you lift? How long can you push through the pain? Even in high-performance environments, the default metric is output. Performance health isn’t only about how much force we can generate, how fast our splits are, or what the latest PR is. It’s about how effectively our system adapts and recovers without breaking our rhythm.


This isn't just semantics. It's a framing shift. Athletes, entrepreneurs, working professionals…we all know what it's like to produce results while quietly falling apart. We can hit our PR and still be burnt out. We can sleep eight hours and still feel exhausted. The truth is, raw effort and clean numbers don’t always tell the full story. Performance health is what bridges the gap between doing well and actually being well.

Silhouette of a person running, surrounded by swirling colors. A brain, heart, and heartbeat line are visible, symbolizing health and energy.

Adaptability as the Real Signal


At the center of performance health is adaptability. Not just physical resilience to training load, but flexibility across systems, including mental, emotional, neurological, and metabolic. The ability to shift between intensity and ease, to recover efficiently from both emotional and physiological load, and to re-engage with clarity after setbacks is what defines sustainable performance.


Heart rate variability (HRV) is increasingly the go-to metric for how we measure adaptability physiologically. It reflects the balance between sympathetic (drive) and parasympathetic (recovery) states. High HRV is associated with faster recovery, greater cognitive control, and more flexible stress responses, but HRV alone is not the full picture. It doesn’t tell us why our recovery is slow, what thoughts are interfering with our focus, or whether we’re pushing to prove something or training from a grounded place.


Adaptability also lives in the cognitive and emotional layers of performance. Are our thoughts reactive or responsive? Do we shift quickly from problem to possibility, or do we spiral in stress? Beliefs, thought patterns, and internal narratives all influence how our body responds to pressure. The brain and nervous system are one feedback loop, not separate systems.


People with high performance health don’t avoid stress; they process it. They can experience intensity without getting locked inside it. That shows up in how they move, how they breathe, and how they recover. It’s the difference between being wired and being ready.


Hidden Load of Emotional Mismatch


Performance health doesn’t just live in muscles and metrics. It lives in emotions, and one of the most disruptive forces isn’t overtraining–it’s emotional dissonance.


When our inner state doesn’t match our external role (i.e. when we’re pushing hard while secretly depleted, leading while quietly unsure, or showing up while our mind is disconnected) the nervous system logs it as stress. Not all stress looks like panic. Sometimes, it’s the slow grind of misalignment that’s even more sinister. The kind that makes rest feel unproductive and effort feel hollow.


This disconnect shows up in physical ways: low HRV despite rest, tension that doesn't release with stretching, sleep that feels shallow even when uninterrupted. Our body knows when we’re faking ease. Over time, that tension becomes our baseline, and we stop noticing the strain because it becomes the new normal.


Performance health means checking for coherence, both mentally and physically. Do our actions match our emotional state? Are we responding from alignment or from obligation? If we’re consistently overriding our internal cues, we’re kicking the proverbial can down the road it falls off a cliff (and us along with it). That accumulation without adaptation is what breaks systems, not just in the body, but in behavior.


Fragmented Data, Fractured Recovery


The modern athlete or high-performer often lives inside a sea of metrics. There’s nothing inherently wrong with data, but when information is fragmented, it creates confusion. We might know our sleep score, HRV, step count, caloric intake, and training volume, but still not know how we feel, or worse, feel one way and not trust it.


One of the goals of performance health is to restore confidence in internal awareness. It’s to give people tools that help them interpret their psychophysical signals in real time. Our body is not confused. It communicates clearly through breath, muscle tone, tension patterns, and subtle shifts in focus or energy, but if we’re only checking our readiness via physical data, we might miss the more nuanced signals that come before things unravel.


Research extensively supports this integrated approach. Studies have shown that subjective measures of recovery (i.e. how we feel, what we notice, how alert or present we are) can often outperform objective data in predicting performance consistency. When both objective metrics and subjective measures align, it's a game changer. When they don’t, I’m sure we all know the results.


State Shifting as a Marker of Health


Another under-discussed component of performance health is the ability to shift states. This means moving fluidly between stress and recovery, focus and rest, exertion and integration. It’s not about staying calm or being perfectly regulated all the time. It’s about moving with intentional rhythm.


Research on neuroplasticity and stress recovery points to the importance of transitions. Those who can downshift their nervous systems after intense competition or high-stress situations show better long-term adaptation. Similarly, individuals who take time to complete stress responses and “close the loop,” whether through movement, expression, or structured recovery protocols, maintain higher levels of baseline resilience.


This is where things often get misunderstood. It’s easy to think that resilience means the ability to tolerate discomfort. While partially true, in the performance health model, resilience also means resetting faster. It means completing the stress loop instead of carrying it forward. The most elite performers don’t just handle more; they’re able to complete stress cycles more efficiently while also maintaining rhythm.


One incredibly quick, simple, and evidence-based method for supporting this process is controlled physiological sighing. All it is is a double inhale followed by a long, slow exhale. Andrew Huberman and colleagues show that this technique can rapidly reduce sympathetic nervous system activity and support vagal tone. It’s a small thing, but when done regularly, it helps the system return to a baseline of calm alertness, especially post-effort.


Psychological Precision Over Grit


Performance health also asks a different question than most training systems. Instead of "How much can we take?", it asks, "How precisely can we calibrate?" Grit is useful, but without precision, it’s just blunt force rather than concentrated energy. It becomes overtraining, emotional rigidity, and injury masked as discipline.


In the brain, precision shows up as attentional flexibility, which is the ability to shift focus, reframe challenges, and re-engage after failure. These traits aren’t just mental. They show up in the nervous system through markers like respiratory rate variability, heart-brain coherence, and hormonal rhythm stability. A person who can remain present, curious, and responsive under pressure isn't just "mentally tough." They're neurally aligned.


That alignment shows up emotionally as well. People with high psychological precision tend to be more emotionally literate, less reactive, and better able to distinguish between physical fatigue and emotional drag. They don’t override as often because they don’t need to. Their system is listening.


Performance Health Is a Feedback Loop


Ultimately, performance health isn’t a destination. It’s a loop. We train. We feel. We reflect. We adjust. We re-enter with more clarity. The more seamless that loop becomes, the more sustainable our growth will be. If we’re stuck in constant output without integration, the loop fractures, and fractured loops don’t sustain progress—they just delay breakdowns.


The goal with performance health is to help people build systems that reinforce integration. That might mean collecting the right data, but it also means learning to sense more deeply, to respond more fluidly, and to stay in-tune with our own experience rather than outsourcing awareness solely to numbers.


Recording our thoughts is one of the most impactful ways to shift towards performance health. Whether that’s writing it down on paper, typing it out, or recording a voice-note, the medium doesn’t really matter. This isn’t the kind of recording where we track everything obsessively, just a simple end-of-day practice. What did I feel physically today? What was easy? What was harder than expected? This kind of reflection has been shown to improve self-regulation, increase awareness of early warning signs, and support the consolidation of learning through embodied cognition.


Performance health isn’t something we buy or measure in isolation. It’s something we train over time, across all systems. A consistent practice that helps us today, but also prepares us for tomorrow. 


References


  1. Shaffer, F., & Ginsberg, J. P. (2017). An overview of heart rate variability metrics and norms. Frontiers in Public Health, 5, 258.

  2. Huberman, A. D., et al. (2023). Brief structured respiration techniques can rapidly reduce physiological arousal. Cell Reports Medicine, 4(1), 100895.

  3. Kellmann, M., et al. (2018). Recovery and stress in sport: A manual for testing, assessment, and monitoring. Human Kinetics.

  4. Kuppens, P., et al. (2012). The relation between valence and arousal in subjective experience. Psychological Bulletin, 138(4), 917-940.

  5. Gervais, W. M., & Norenzayan, A. (2012). Emotion and adaptive performance: The interplay of emotional awareness and behavioral flexibility. Emotion Review, 4(4), 301-307.

  6. Solberg Nes, L., et al. (2010). Self-regulation processes and health: Implications for understanding and treating chronic illness. Cognitive Therapy and Research, 34(5), 406-418.

  7. Beedie, C. J., & Lane, A. M. (2012). The role of emotion in performance: A psychophysiological perspective. Journal of Applied Sport Psychology, 24(3), 299-312.

 
 
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