Most people cram training and sleep into the cracks of an already overloaded life. Human biologist Gary Brecka does the opposite. Six years ago, he made a decision that explains how he can hit 14 cities in 18 days on opposite sides of the globe, work with private clients, host a podcast, run a media platform and not explode mentally.
“I schedule sleep first, then I schedule exercise, and then all my meetings and trips are scheduled around that,” she says. Muscles & Fitness. “No matter how busy the schedule is, sleep and exercise are secondary.”
For someone who is on planes and on stages non-stop, embodying his brand The Absolute Man it comes down to logistics that offer both structure and flexibility. We sat down with Gary Brecka and were curious to learn his secret weapons for performing at a high level even on vacation. You will be surprised that it is much simpler than you think.
Superhuman Breka Protects First
Breka calls sleep “our human superpower” and treats it like it is. Even as he bounces from Miami to Sydney to Dubai, he does what he can to help his body feel night and day.
“You can’t regulate your sleep-wake cycle when you’re on the road. You can’t determine when the sun rises and when it sets,” he explains. “But you can decide when to feed yourself.”
At his home in Miami, Florida, he sleeps from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. ET, and wherever he is in the world, he doesn’t eat during those hours. When he went to London recently, that meant no food before 11am.
It’s classic circadian biology done with precision. It taps into the “master clock” in the brain, the suprachiasmatic nucleus, and its three biggest Zeitgebers, the things that affect your circadian rhythm: light, movement, and food. When you’ve invited them, your body will be able to adapt to changes in your environment much more easily.
The first 90 minutes belong to him
The first hour and a half of each day is off limits to everyone.
“That first 90 minutes doesn’t even belong to my wife, it doesn’t belong to my kids or my career, it doesn’t belong to my clients,” he says. “It belongs to me alone. But then I give the rest of my day away.”
If we pulled him to those minutes, we’d see the same thing every day: waking up, brushing teeth, scraping tongue, pulling oil, and then straight out into the natural light. There, he does three rounds of 30 deep breaths with a breath hold between rounds.
“My body is so connected to it, it knows that once I start breathing, it’s time to wake up,” she says, adding “we used to go to sleep and wake up with the sun. We don’t do that anymore, but ancestrally, you can’t disconnect those mechanisms. I call morning breathing and sunlight my morning anti-depressant.”
These rituals are simple, portable, give you great value for your time, and are 100% free.

Structure Over Obsession
From the outside, scheduling sleep, exercise, and “me time” before anything else, no matter where in the world one is, can seem obsessive, so I had to ask, “how do you draw the line between healthy, structured life and obsession?”
Brecka explained that “there’s a difference between structure and obsession.” Obsession, for him, is when your happiness depends on the world fitting your plan. Structure is the opposite. You control everything you can and give yourself grace when things don’t go as planned. Structuring in this way leaves room for flexibility.
For example, she shares, “I don’t drink, but if we were at a graduation party and we were toasting champagne, I’ll have half a glass of champagne. If I’m going to a five-year birthday party, I’ll have a slice of birthday cake.” And it adds one key thing, it doesn’t get beat for it.
His first line of defense is how he talks to himself. He warns about this inner voice because it can be powerful. “The expectation you place on yourself is much heavier on your cellular biology than the expectation others place on you,” he explains.
“My first line of defense is to give myself grace,” she says. “We use a different voice to speak to ourselves than we would to someone else.” The same compassion you would give to a distressed spouse or friend is deliberately turned inward.
He says that if you stay in constant self-judgment, you trap your nervous system in fight-or-flight mode. “That’s when you disrupt your circadian rhythm. That’s when you’re not sleeping very well. That’s when your brain is in a constant state of heightened alertness, and that’s when your immune system is weakened. You’re not good at fending off disease.” Breka explains.
Education for longevity
At 55, Breka does strength training and lifts heavy weights three times a week, but the way he trains has changed.
“Now I’m training for longevity,” he says. “I don’t back squat, I don’t load my body in weird ways with a lot of weight.”
After owning a CrossFit gym, he still believes in speed and heavy weight, just not both at the same time. Instead, he’s a fan of adding minimal effective load even on days he doesn’t have access or time for a full gym workout.
This morning, he says he wore a 17-pound vest from Aion that also adds an element of compression during his ride. “Once it’s on, probably 20 minutes, you forget you even have it on,” he shared.

The Holiday Survival Stack
Brecka says he gives himself a little grace during the holidays, but he has a few secret weapons that help him stay on track.
When I asked him what he thought was the one thing that would break most people during the holidays, his response was blunt and began with “they [the readers] won’t like that.”
1. Skip the combination of alcohol and sugar
Alcohol is the one thing that prompts people to ruthlessly review, especially what they pair it with. “Alcohol is the root of all evil,” he declares, emphasizing what alcohol
takes place in the body. “Acetylaldehyde lowers blood pH and makes your blood more acidic. It also strips the body of essential vitamins and nutrients,” he explained.
While he doesn’t preach to you to stop drinking alcohol completely. Even he would drink a glass on special occasions, but points out that “if you’re going to eliminate anything, eliminate the combination of sugar and alcohol.”
Instead, he suggests picking your spirits and prioritizing premium tequila and full-bodied red wine over grain-based drinks.
2. Arrive first for hot tea
Whether it’s green, black or ginger, one of Brecka’s key holiday party tricks is to start it off with hot tea. “When you finish a really hot, bitter black tea, the last thing you want to do is pick up a bunch of cakes and cookies,” she admits. The warm, slightly bitter drink calms that satiety urge while allowing you to keep a drink in your hand and be social.
3. Prioritize whole foods
Brecka has completely retrained his taste buds away from highly processed foods. “My palate is really geared toward whole foods,” she explained. “I don’t really crave things. If I see a bowl of Doritos and I’m really hungry, I don’t eat it because I’m worried I’ll feel guilty. I don’t eat it because he doesn’t have a palate for it.”
I had to ask how long it takes to recalibrate your palate from craving junk to craving raw Greek yogurt, a handful of berries, a handful of crushed nuts or grain-free granola and a tablespoon of honey—its sweet treat. His answer surprised me. “If you want to do it fast, you can do it with three days of water fasting,” he said.
4. Minerals and molecular hydrogen
Brecka doesn’t miss a sip. If he drinks something, it works for him, even on fasting days. “My go-tos are hydrogen water tablets, amino acids and Baja Gold salt,” he explains. “These are some of the cheapest supplements you can do, and you’re getting all 91 trace elements, you’re getting an anti-inflammatory, you’re getting a selective antioxidant, and you’re getting all nine of the essential amino acids.”
5. Small habits go a long way
With whole foods on his plate, hydrogen and minerals in his water, fasting windows that give his system a break and movement, ideally outside in the morning light, with a little extra load on his frame, Brecka admits it’s all discipline. “But the less discipline you need, the more discipline you have, because your body will start to thrive on the little sustainable habits you build over time,” she said.
For him, that discipline is about a handful of quiet, inglorious habits that let him push at a high level without losing his mind.
“I think these are small incremental changes that, if you’re disciplined and implemented, can make a dramatic difference in how you feel, how you perform, and how you sleep,” he admits, noting that you shouldn’t invest in any expensive biohacking gadgets until you’ve mastered sleep, until exercise is non-negotiable and you’re eating a well-rounded diet. “Nothing else matters, and these are the real simple choices we all have control over.”
