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When most athletes think about performance, they focus on the session, the run, the ride, the workout. But true performance doesn’t just happen in the hour you train; it’s shaped by everything you do in the other 23.
That’s why we built Your Performance Health Cycle, a six-step framework that helps you get more from every day, not just every session.
Each step works together to build consistency, balance training load, and support recovery, helping you perform better, feel fresher, and stay strong all season.
Sleep is the single most powerful recovery tool you have.
During deep sleep, your body releases growth hormone, repairs muscle tissue, and restores energy stores. Without it, progress slows, motivation drops, and recovery feels harder than it should.
Even small changes to your evening routine, like cutting caffeine earlier, taking magnesium before bed, or keeping a consistent sleep schedule, can lead to big improvements in energy, mood, and performance.
How to improve your sleep:
Consistency is built on resilience.
You can’t train hard if you’re constantly managing niggles or tightness. Injury prevention isn’t about doing more, it’s about doing the right things regularly to keep your body strong, mobile, and ready to perform.
Supporting your joints, tendons, and tissues with the right nutrition helps you absorb training load and bounce back faster between sessions.
How to build resilience:
Strength is about more than muscle, it’s about durability.
Building a stronger body improves endurance, reduces fatigue, and helps you handle bigger training loads over time. It’s the difference between peaking once and performing consistently all season.
Strength-focused nutrition gives your body what it needs to adapt, from creatine and nitrates to B vitamins and oxygen-supporting supplements like cordyceps.
How to build lasting strength:
Your sessions only work if you fuel them properly.
Carbohydrates are your body’s main energy source during exercise. When you run out, power drops, concentration fades, and recovery takes longer. Matching your carb intake to your training intensity and duration is the foundation of better endurance.
Training your gut to absorb carbohydrates efficiently means you can sustain energy and avoid GI issues, the “practice like you race” approach that every athlete should follow.
Carb intake guidelines:
How to fuel smarter:
Hydration is one of the simplest ways to improve performance, yet it’s often overlooked.
Even mild dehydration can reduce endurance, increase perceived effort, and delay recovery. It’s not just about drinking more water, it’s about replacing the electrolytes lost through sweat, sodium, potassium, and magnesium, to keep the body balanced.
How to stay hydrated:
Recovery is where adaptation happens.
When you train, you’re creating controlled stress on your body. Recovery is when that stress turns into progress, when glycogen stores refill, muscles repair, and strength is rebuilt.
The first hour after training is crucial. Refuelling with carbs, protein, and electrolytes kick-starts the recovery process, reduces soreness, and helps you perform again the next day.
How to recover effectively:
You don’t need to overhaul everything overnight, performance health is built through small, consistent habits.
Over time, these steps work together to create the foundation for sustained performance, helping you train smarter, recover faster, and stay consistent across the season.
Explore Your Performance Health Cycle ›
Your performance isn’t defined by one workout, it’s shaped by everything that surrounds it.
The sleep you get, the fuel you choose, the hydration you maintain, and the way you recover all matter.
The Performance Health Cycle helps you bring all of that together, so you can perform at your best, every day.
Anthony, XMiles Founder