Transform Your Body and Mind by Returning to What Works
Every day, I receive messages from people who’ve transformed their lives by embracing a simpler approach to health. They’re tired of complicated diets, expensive supplements, and conflicting advice. They want clarity. They want results. Most importantly, they want to feel genuinely well again.
This is why I’ve developed what I call Dr Tosin’s Principles and Foundations for Healthy Living – a straightforward roadmap that cuts through the noise and gets back to basics.
The Problem with Modern Health Advice
We live in an age of information overload. Every week brings a new “superfood,” another genetic test promising to unlock your health secrets, or a revolutionary supplement that claims to fix everything. We’ve become so obsessed with the complex that we’ve forgotten the simple.
Here’s what I’ve learned after years of practice: your body already knows how to be healthy. It’s been programmed over thousands of years to thrive. The issue isn’t that we need more complicated solutions – it’s that we’ve moved too far away from what naturally works.
Think about it this way. Your great-great-grandmother didn’t count calories or worry about her macros. She didn’t need a fitness tracker or a complicated workout routine. Yet photographs from her era show people who were generally leaner, stronger, and healthier than many of us today.
What changed? Our environment did. But here’s the good news: we can take the best of modern life while returning to the fundamental principles that have always supported human health.
The Foundation: Working with Your Genes, Not Against Them
Your DNA hasn’t changed much in the last 10,000 years. The genes you carry are essentially the same ones that helped your ancestors survive and thrive in a very different world. These genes are like a instruction manual, but here’s the crucial part – how those instructions get followed depends entirely on the signals you send through your lifestyle choices.
This is where most people get it wrong. They think their genes are their destiny. “I have the fat gene,” they say, or “Diabetes runs in my family.” While genetics do play a role, the lifestyle signals you send to your genes matter far more than most people realize.
When you eat the right foods, move in the right ways, sleep properly, and manage stress effectively, you’re sending your genes signals that say: “Build a strong, healthy, energetic body.” When you don’t, you’re essentially telling your genes: “Store fat, increase inflammation, and prepare for trouble.”
The choice is yours.
Dr Tosin’s 10 Foundational Principles
Let me share the ten principles that form the foundation of optimal health. These aren’t complicated theories – they’re practical guidelines based on how your body is designed to function.
Before we dive in, let me be completely honest: these are principles I strive towards and I am by no means perfect. I especially struggle in areas of sleep and reading, and occasionally fail in the foods section 😳. The goal isn’t perfection – it’s progress.
Principle 1: Fuel Your Body Like the Machine It Is
What this means: Eat real, whole foods that your great-grandmother would recognize.
Your body runs best on high-quality protein, plenty of colorful vegetables, select fruits, and healthy fats. This isn’t about strict rules or deprivation – it’s about choosing foods that actually nourish your cells.
Focus on grass-fed meats, wild-caught fish, organic vegetables, nuts, seeds, and fruits like berries. These foods provide the building blocks your body needs to repair itself, maintain energy, and stay strong.
What to avoid? The processed stuff that comes in packages with ingredient lists you can’t pronounce. Refined sugars, industrial seed oils, and grains that spike your blood sugar and promote inflammation.
Start here: For your next meal, ask yourself: “Is this something that existed 100 years ago?” If yes, you’re probably on the right track.
Principle 2: Move Like Your Life Depends on It (But Keep It Natural)
What this means: Your body is designed for frequent, gentle movement with occasional bursts of intensity.
Forget the idea that you need to punish yourself in the gym for hours every day. Your ancestors moved constantly but at a comfortable pace – walking, climbing, carrying things. They didn’t jog on treadmills for 45 minutes while staring at screens.
Aim for 2-5 hours of gentle movement each week. This could be walking, hiking, swimming, or cycling at a pace where you could hold a conversation. One of my favorite ways to do this is rucking – simply walking with a weighted backpack. It’s incredibly effective, mimics how our ancestors carried loads, and turns a simple walk into a more complete workout. The key is consistency, not intensity.
Start here: Take a 20-minute walk after lunch every day. No music, no podcasts – just you, moving at a comfortable pace, ideally somewhere with trees or nature. If you want to try rucking, start with just 10-15 pounds in a backpack.
Principle 3:Build Real-World Strength
What this means: Train your body for the movements it was designed to do.
Your ancestors didn’t do bicep curls, but they did lift heavy things, carry their children, and move their bodies through space in complex ways. This kind of functional movement builds the kind of strength that actually serves you in daily life.
Two to three times per week, spend 30-45 minutes doing movements that engage your whole body: squatting, lifting, pushing, pulling, and carrying. Think of it as training for life, not just looking good in photos. And yes, feel free to use the gym – I definitely do. The equipment is there to help you get stronger and move better.
Start here: Master the basic bodyweight movements – squats, push-ups, and planks. When these become easy, add weight or try more challenging variations.
Principle 4: Remember That Sometimes You Need to Go Fast
What this means: Your body needs occasional high-intensity efforts to stay metabolically healthy.
A few times each week, challenge your cardiovascular system with brief, intense efforts. This doesn’t mean long, grueling sessions. Think short sprints, hill climbs, or high-intensity intervals that last 30 seconds to 2 minutes.
These brief challenges trigger beneficial hormonal responses that improve your metabolism, cardiovascular health, and ability to handle stress.
Start here: Find a hill or flight of stairs. Walk up at a challenging pace, then walk down slowly to recover. Repeat 4-6 times, twice per week.
Principle 5: Prioritize Sleep Like Your Health Depends on It (Because It Does)
What this means: Quality sleep isn’t a luxury – it’s essential for every aspect of your health.
During sleep, your body repairs muscle tissue, consolidates memories, regulates hormones, and clears toxins from your brain. Skimp on sleep, and every other health effort becomes less effective.
Aim for 7-9 hours of quality sleep in a cool, dark room. Establish a regular bedtime routine and stick to it, even on weekends.
Start here: Set a “device curfew” one hour before bedtime. Use this time for reading, gentle stretching, or conversation with family.
Principle 6: Play Like You Did as a Child
What this means: Fun, unstructured physical activity is essential for mental and physical wellbeing.
Play isn’t just for children. It’s how we release stress, connect with others, and keep movement enjoyable rather than a chore. Whether it’s dancing, playing catch, swimming in the ocean, or roughhousing with your kids, find ways to move that make you smile.
Start here: Schedule one “play” activity each week. Could be as simple as kicking a ball around with your children or taking a dance class.
Principle 7: Get Your Daily Dose of Sunshine
What this means: Moderate sun exposure is essential for vitamin D production and mental wellbeing.
Despite what you might have heard, the sun isn’t your enemy. Moderate, regular exposure helps your body produce vitamin D, regulates your sleep-wake cycle, and has powerful mood-boosting effects.
Aim for 15-30 minutes of direct sunlight daily, adjusting based on your skin tone and the intensity of the sun. Build up gradually and never burn.
Start here: Take your morning coffee or tea outside. Even 10 minutes of morning sunlight can help regulate your circadian rhythm.
Principle 8: Protect Yourself from Unnecessary Risks
What this means: Common sense safety measures can prevent injuries that derail your health goals.
This might seem obvious, but many health setbacks come from preventable accidents. Wear your seatbelt, don’t text while driving, be aware of your surroundings, and don’t take unnecessary physical risks.
A broken bone or serious injury can set back your fitness goals by months or years. A little caution goes a long way.
Start here: Do a “safety audit” of your daily routines. Are there simple changes you could make to reduce your risk of injury?
Principle 9: Minimize Your Toxic Load
What this means: Reduce exposure to chemicals and toxins in your food, environment, and personal care products.
Your liver and kidneys work constantly to process toxins, but the modern world exposes us to far more chemicals than our ancestors ever encountered. While you can’t avoid everything, you can make choices that reduce your overall toxic burden.
Choose organic when possible, filter your water, use natural cleaning products, and read labels on personal care items.
Start here: Replace one processed food in your regular diet with a whole food alternative. For example, swap flavored yogurt for plain yogurt with fresh berries.
Principle 10: Challenge Your Mind Daily
What this means: Your brain needs regular exercise just like your body does.
Mental stimulation keeps your brain sharp, improves memory, and may help prevent cognitive decline. This doesn’t mean you need to do crossword puzzles (though you can if you enjoy them). Any activity that requires learning, creativity, or problem-solving counts.
Read books, learn new skills, have meaningful conversations, or take up a creative hobby. The key is regularly challenging yourself to think in new ways.
Start here: Read for 20 minutes each day, ideally a physical book rather than a screen.
The Goals: What You Can Expect
When you consistently apply these principles, you’re working toward becoming:
Healthy – Not just the absence of disease, but genuine vitality and wellbeing.
Energetic – Steady energy throughout the day without crashes or the need for constant caffeine.
Happy – Better mood regulation and mental clarity from proper nutrition, movement, and sleep.
Lean – A healthy body composition that you can maintain without constant restriction or willpower.
Strong – Functional strength that serves you in daily life and keeps you capable as you age.
Sharp – Mental clarity and focus that allows you to be productive and engaged.
Resilient – The ability to handle life’s stresses without being overwhelmed or getting sick.
Making It Work in the Real World
I know what you’re thinking: “This sounds great, Dr Tosin, but I live in the real world. I have a job, kids, responsibilities. How do I actually do this?”
Here’s the truth: you don’t need to be perfect. You don’t need to overhaul your entire life overnight. Small, consistent changes compound over time to create remarkable results.
Start with one principle. Master it over a few weeks, then add another. Progress, not perfection, is the goal.
Remember, your ancestors didn’t have gyms, organic grocery stores, or sleep trackers. They just lived in alignment with these principles naturally. You have advantages they didn’t – knowledge, choice, and the ability to be intentional about your health.
The question isn’t whether these principles work. The question is: are you ready to give your body what it’s been asking for all along?
Your Next Step
Health isn’t complicated, but it does require consistency and intention. These ten principles aren’t just theories – they’re a practical framework for creating the vitality and wellbeing you deserve.
Choose one principle that resonates with you most strongly. Commit to it for the next two weeks. Notice how you feel, then build from there.
Your body has been waiting for you to give it what it needs to thrive. Today is a perfect day to start.
What principle will you start with? Share your commitment in the comments below – accountability makes all the difference.