Health hacks. Supplements, nootropics, MCT oil, sleep aids, HRV training equipment, meditation software--whatever I find works. $1200 USD more than covers my annual health needs for regular upkeep beyond food and exercise, but I would spend four times as much for the same without hesitation.
From a purely monetary perspective, I know I can reliably turn $1200 USD invested in my health into many tens of thousands more, but only if I am reliable.
Having the right tools helps me avoid illness, depression, inessential idleness, "brain fog," anxiety, and other, similar maladies. Not fighting myself means I have more energy to focus on my goals, which results in more time for essential idleness, which provides me more energy to focus on my goals, and so on.
With the right tools, I can work at peak performance every day, and $1200 is, to me, a worthwhile price to achieve this. Regardless, I wish you well in whatever you choose to invest your $1200 in.
Yes, there appears to be good evidence that Vitamin C and Zinc aid immune function. Yes, Iodine deficiency is real, and you should ensure you have enough. Yes, 5-HTP, Tryptophan, Melatonin, and Magnesium are excellent sleep aids. Yes, Caprylic acid oxidizes in the gut to produce ketones. Optimizing bodily function starts with diet, continues with exercise, and finishes with topping off whatever is missing, or reducing whatever is in excess. Knowing what's in your food, how your body interacts with it, and how to supplement it doesn't seem like hand-waving to me. The hand-waving comes when people make extraordinary claims far exceeding the known effects of any one of these tools, and with time and effort, it is possible to cut the wheat from the chaff.
There really is nowhere near enough epidemiological study on the effects of nootropics or performance enhancing drugs, in general. Much of the science surrounding the recent wave of biohacking is bleeding edge and, often, a study on some particular use also represents the entire corpus on its effects. In service of biohacking, this makes it difficult to weed out the hacks. As ever, caveat emptor.
That said, when it comes to making personal decisions about what helps you or hinders you, I don't believe you necessarily need to be a neurologist or an organic chemist. You can collect stories from other people, and take them on balance with what studies you can find. Going over something like http://www.jbc.org/content/89/2/547.full.pdf won't make for exciting reading, but it can help you make informed decisions. You can, with a cautious and self-critical attitude, guinea pig yourself, taking logs and noting your overall health and performance, preferably with the help of your doctor. You can ask others near you if they notice any changes in your performance or mood. And at all times, you can ask yourself how you feel.
There are a lot of people cashing in on "brain drugs" of late. You mention Bulletproof (Dave Asprey), and while Dave surely is making good money, he does sell decent products. To be considered separately, Dave openly advocates for sourcing food and supplements from wherever they may be cheapest and of good quality, but I happen to like his coffee, so I fork over the cash.
I don't know how placebo effect for one supplement could amount to much if you're already taking 30-40 vitamins, powders, and capsules a day (as I am). If I take one more white gel cap, I barely notice. What matters to me are my notes over the last few weeks, whether I've observed any positive or negative impact in that time, and whether that impact was sustained without any obvious confounding factors. This is hardly a multi-year, double-blind trial, but it is enough for me to confidently decide whether I find a drug's results favorable enough to continue using it.
As a freelance contractor, falling into even short bouts of illness, depression, indecision, immobility, or myopia represents a real and ever-present threat to my quality of life. For me, $1200 is completely worth the price of finding new ways to increase my total productive time. For others, that money is better spent elsewhere. Yet I would argue that even webmaven's purchase of a good chair and keyboard is right up there in my original list, under "whatever I find works." Any investment in one's health, I believe, is sure to be repaid in full, for what use is the rest if we do not have our health?
I will echo this. spending on health hacks is not a expense but investment for future. Meditation retreats, healthy rich omega diet, natural foods, exercise, magnetic, holistic,
Ayurveda therapies to boost your health performance.
once you are at peak you can stretch limits and thnik clearly and compete faster
From which trusted store would you source nootropics and supplements? Those and magic oils seem to attract varying levels of quality products and some questionable ratings on Amazon, for example! Thanks.
I've come to consider nootropicsdepot.com a trustworthy source of ready-made nootropics, but for "expert mode," I strongly recommend experimenting with a custom stack from the ingredients at bulksupplements.com.
For something easier to start, I got my first great results from Onnit's Alpha Brain while consuming good fat sources. Not all nootropics and supporting ingredients are fat-soluble, but it pays to know when they are so you get the most out of them.
Also, I've experienced piercing clarity, creativity (building effective analogies, lateral thinking, creating novel solutions), and astonishing cognitive speed during light hypnagogia from very low doses of psilocybin combined with nootropics. Of course, the problems with this approach are manifest.
I would hire a career coach. One idea I have been kicking around is bi-weekly scrums for those who want to go up the ladder. You will go to the scrum, explain what you have done in last two weeks and explain what you will do in next two weeks. The scrum master/coach plus others will give you suggestions based on what your career goals are.
#1 is a good chair. It's a cliche, but my Aeron has lasted for the entire 12 years of it's warranty (and they've shipped replacement parts out whenever needed), and has been worth every penny I spent on it.
The newly redesigned version[1] looks attractive as a replacement (probably in 2018).
After that, I would say #2 is a good keyboard, but specific recommendations are very personal. Suffice it to say that you probably want to spend at least $150 (and possibly 2-3x that) for the right keyboard for you. I am very likely to purchase a Keyboardio Model 01[2] next to replace my venerable Unicomp buckling spring keyboard[3].
Once you have the ergonomics of your work environment adjusted to your physique, you can commit to an extra hour or more every day of studying (by using) new tools, libraries, languages, etc. without unnecessary stress on your body.
Man, with a keyboard from keyboard.io, it might actually make vanilla Emacs easier to use!
I wonder why previous designs of keyboards, including typewriters, didn't make greater use of your thumbs. It's a good half of the functionality of your hand that most input devices blithely ignore, in favor of our pinky fingers?! On the surface that seems like an ergonomic catastrophe.
Does anyone have a good reason why keyboards are designed they way they are now?
I don't know why they wouldn't make the space for both fingers. I used to use logitech software for programming keyboards and mouses but the software was so ram intensive for what it did (few keyboard binds). I'm sure this is not the case with a simple key re-binding but not for me unfortunately.
Oh hey, Aerons are 15% off until (through?) Monday. Might be worth knowing for others like me who've lusted after one but vacillate on whether and when to pull the trigger.
From a purely monetary perspective, I know I can reliably turn $1200 USD invested in my health into many tens of thousands more, but only if I am reliable.
Having the right tools helps me avoid illness, depression, inessential idleness, "brain fog," anxiety, and other, similar maladies. Not fighting myself means I have more energy to focus on my goals, which results in more time for essential idleness, which provides me more energy to focus on my goals, and so on.
With the right tools, I can work at peak performance every day, and $1200 is, to me, a worthwhile price to achieve this. Regardless, I wish you well in whatever you choose to invest your $1200 in.