Most people assume their best years are behind them. They're wrong.
Longevity Loop is for those who refuse to slow down and want a smarter way to stay strong, energised, and capable for life.
Because at some point, what used to work… stops working.
Energy dips. Recovery slows. Progress stalls. And doing more of the same only leads to frustration.
After working with hundreds of clients, longevity strategist Satbir Kahlon uncovered one consistent pattern: everyone has a weakest loop, the one area of their health quietly limiting everything else.
Each week, Longevity Loop breaks down strength, recovery, metabolism, mindset, and the daily habits that compound over time.
Using the PRIME™ framework, every episode gives you a structured way to train smarter, recover better, and build your Second Peak.
This isn't about going backwards. It's about unlocking a stronger, sharper, more capable version of yourself.
Find your weakest loop.
Strengthen it.
Move Smarter. Live Longer.
New episodes every week.
You are either building physical capacity right now, or you are losing it. There is no neutral.
Welcome to Longevity Loop. I am Satbir Kahlon.
This show is for people who refuse to accept that their best years are behind them.
Each week, I break down what actually matters so you can train smarter, recover better, and stay strong for life.
Today, we are going deep on the Performance Loop. The first of the five PRIME loops. The one that forms the physical foundation of everything else in the system.
Here is what we are covering today: the five pillars of physical performance, the myths that have been sending people in the wrong direction for years, a performance scorecard you can use today, and the exercise hierarchy, which is foundational versus supplementary.
This one runs long. Stay with it.
Why do some people feel strong, energetic, and genuinely capable well into their sixties and seventies, while others begin struggling much earlier?
It is rarely luck. And it is rarely purely genetic.
The people who remain capable, strong, and vital for longer almost always have one thing in common. They treated performance as a lifelong practice. Not a phase. Not a season. A practice.
And the people who struggle earlier than they should? Most of them were never shown what performance actually means. They were shown weight loss programs. Transformation challenges. Before-and-after photos. But never what it means to build a body that functions well across a lifetime.
That is what today's episode is about.
And before we go into the framework, let me tell you something I have consistently observed over more than a decade of working with people on their health.
I have worked with people in their sixties who get off the floor effortlessly and people in their forties who cannot.
The difference is rarely age.
It is almost always what they have consistently practised or consistently avoided.
That is the thread running through everything we cover today.
Performance has nothing to do with being an athlete.
Performance is simply this. Having the physical and mental capacity to do what matters to you.
It is being able to play with your kids on the floor without your knees giving out. Carry the groceries without your back aching. Travel comfortably. Work with full cognitive energy. Enjoy your hobbies without your body limiting what you can do. And remain independent as you move through life.
Here is an exercise I want you to do now or after this episode.
Write down the ten physical things you want to be still able to do at seventy, eighty, or even ninety years old. Getting up off the ground. Carrying your own luggage. Keeping up with your grandchildren. Hiking a trail. Swimming in the ocean. Playing sports with people you love. Living in your home without assistance.
Whatever your list looks like, that is your training target. Not a summer body. Not a dress size. That list.
Performance today predicts quality of life tomorrow.
Think of physical performance like a bank account.
Every training session, every walk, every strength session is a deposit.
Every year of inactivity is a withdrawal.
Most people do not notice the problem until they are trying to make a large withdrawal from an account that is already empty.
You cannot borrow against future capacity. You can only build it now.
The body is either building capacity or losing it. There is no neutral.
The single biggest myth in the health and wellness industry is this. Fitness is about how you look.
You can lose weight and become less healthy. You can lose weight and become weaker. You can lose weight with less energy, worse recovery, lower performance capacity and still be celebrated because the scale moved.
The scale tells you what you weigh. It tells you nothing about what your body can do.
Ask yourself this. Would you rather lose 10 kilograms? Or gain 10 healthy years? Because they are not the same thing.
Performance is the goal. Capability is the measure. Appearance is a by-product, not the other way around.
Performance sits across five pillars.
Strength. Cardiovascular fitness. Mobility. Balance and stability. Power.
Performance is not one quality. It is five. And you need all of them.
It is strength when you need to lift. Fitness when you need to move. Mobility when you need to reach. Balance when you need to catch yourself. Power when you need to react.
That is the system.
And what is the goal of that system? It is not what you see in the gym. It is what you can still do at eighty.
Each pillar matters. Each one has a specific role. And each one has been misunderstood in ways that have cost people years of results.
Let us go through them one by one.
Pillar one. Strength.
If there is one physical quality research consistently links to longevity and quality of life, it is strength.
There is a concept in sports medicine and longevity science called sarcopenia. Sarcopenia is the gradual loss of muscle mass and function that occurs as we age without adequate resistance training.
Muscle is not just the thing that moves your body. Muscle is an endocrine organ. It produces and regulates hormones. It plays a central role in glucose metabolism. It influences inflammatory markers. It supports joint health and structural integrity. And it is the tissue most associated with functional independence as you age.
When muscle mass declines significantly, the downstream effects touch almost every system. Energy levels drop. Metabolic function slows. Falls risk increases. Recovery becomes harder. Independence diminishes.
For most people, muscle is not about looking athletic. Muscle is retirement insurance. It is the tissue that keeps you independent. The strength you build now is the capacity you draw on later.
And there is one more piece that belongs here. Bone density.
Strength training does not just build muscle. It directly stimulates bone remodelling. Every time a muscle contracts against resistance, it pulls on the bone it attaches to, and that mechanical stress is one of the most effective signals the body has for maintaining bone density.
For women in particular, this becomes increasingly significant. Bone density loss accelerates at certain hormonal transitions, and the downstream consequences, including fracture risk, loss of independence, and reduced mobility, are serious and largely preventable.
We will cover bone density in its own dedicated episode. But know this. When you strength train, you are building more than muscle.
This is not inevitable. It is largely preventable. And the prevention is resistance training.
Progressive resistance training is the single most evidence-backed intervention for preserving and building muscle mass across a lifetime.
Muscle mass and grip strength are among the strongest predictors of long-term health outcomes and mortality risk.
Grip strength in particular deserves a moment. Researchers use it as a proxy for overall physiological health because it correlates surprisingly well with future outcomes, such as cardiovascular risk, cognitive function, independence, and all-cause mortality. A simple measurement that reflects the health of the entire system. That is why it sits in the performance scorecard later in this episode.
Two to three sessions per week. Progressive overload. Compound movements: squats, deadlifts, presses, rows, and hinges.
If these movements are new to you, start with a qualified coach or trainer. A few sessions of good coaching at the start are one of the best investments you can make.
And for those training at home with lighter weights and resistance bands, that is a legitimate starting point. The principle that matters is progressive overload. The equipment matters less than the principle.
Two more myths worth addressing here before we move on.
Myth one: light weights tone muscle.
There is no such thing as toning. Muscle either grows, maintains, or shrinks. High-repetition, light-weight training does not produce the mechanical tension required for meaningful muscle development.
The belief that heavy training makes women bulky has kept generations of women under-training with resistance and quietly losing the muscle mass that determines their long-term health outcomes.
Train with weights that genuinely challenge you. Not weights that merely tire you.
Myth two: if you are not sore, it was not a good session.
Soreness is not a measure of effectiveness. It is a measure of novelty and tissue damage. Chasing soreness leads to chronic under-recovery, inconsistent training, and eventual regression.
Adaptation is the goal. Not soreness. A well-designed program will eventually produce sessions in which you feel little to no soreness, not because it was ineffective, but because your body has adapted. That is not failure. That is exactly what progress looks like.
Self-test: strength.
Can you get off the floor without using your hands?
Sit down right now and stand back up without putting your hands on the floor or using furniture.
A study published in the European Journal of Preventive Cardiology followed more than 2,000 adults and found that the ability to sit on the floor and stand back up without support was strongly associated with long-term health and survival outcomes.
Pillar two. Cardiovascular fitness. If strength is the foundation, cardiovascular fitness is the engine.
The gold-standard measure is VO2 Max, your maximal oxygen uptake. And VO2 Max is one of the strongest single predictors of all-cause mortality in the research literature, associated with a lower risk.
The myth under this pillar is that more is better. Most people use high-intensity training as their default, not as their tool.
For anyone carrying a significant stress load outside their training, which describes most people listening to this, chronic high-intensity training is not the optimal foundation because intensity is a stressor.
Understanding cardiovascular training means understanding three zones.
Zone 2 is the foundation. Full conversation possible. Roughly 60-75 per cent of maximum heart rate. Sweet spot for mitochondrial function, aerobic base, metabolic efficiency.
The research points to three to five hours per week as the meaningful target. But if that feels out of reach right now, start with what you can actually sustain. Thirty minutes of genuine Zone 2 twice a week is a better foundation than five hours you never do.
Zone 3 is the practical middle ground. Short phrases only, not full sentences. More time-efficient. Twenty to thirty minutes produces meaningful adaptations. The real-world complement to Zone 2 for busy lives.
Zones 4 and 5 are where HIIT lives. Genuinely effective for improving VO2 Max. But a tool, not a foundation.
HIIT is not wrong. It is just being used in the wrong order by most people. You do not build a house starting with the roof.
Self-test: cardiovascular.
Brisk ten-minute walk. Full conversation throughout, Zone 2. Short phrases only, Zone 3. Cannot speak without gasping, high-intensity territory.
Use this talk test every time you train for cardiovascular fitness. It tells you more than any heart rate number.
One more thing before we move on.
Many people who are struggling with their cardiovascular performance do not have a fitness problem. They have a recovery problem.
Their aerobic system is being asked to perform without the recovery capacity to support it. We will go deep on that in the Recovery Loop episode. But file that away as we continue today.
Pillar three. Mobility.
Flexibility and mobility are not the same thing. Flexibility is the passive range. Mobility is the ability to control movement through a range of active movement. Strength through range.
Flexibility is the passive length of a muscle.
Mobility is your joint's ability to actively move through a full range of motion with control.
You can be very flexible and have poor mobility. You can be relatively inflexible and have excellent functional mobility.
The myth: I stretch regularly, so my mobility is covered.
Passive flexibility is not functional mobility. Stretching alone does not build the strength-through-range that joints need to remain healthy under load. What builds functional mobility is moving through full ranges under load. Squats. Hip hinges. Overhead pressing. Pulling movements through the full range. Stretching supports this. It is not a replacement for it.
Self-test: mobility.
Deep squat. Feet shoulder-width apart, squat to full depth, hold ten seconds without heels leaving the floor.
If this is difficult or impossible, that's meaningful information about your hip, ankle, and thoracic mobility.
Pillar four. Balance and stability. The pillar that gets the least attention, yet is one of the most important for long-term health.
Falls are one of the leading causes of injury, hospitalisation, and loss of independence across the lifespan. And they do not just happen to people in their eighties.
Balance is a skill. Skills deteriorate without practice. The time to train it is before it becomes a problem.
And connected to this is one of the most damaging beliefs I encounter consistently.
The idea that pain is a normal part of getting older.
People accept joint, back, and knee pain as inevitable. They chalk it up to age and move on.
But chronic pain is most often the result of poor movement patterns, inadequate strength, and neglected mobility, not age itself. Many people are living with pain they do not have to live with.
Age is not the sentence most people believe it to be. The sentence is usually years of patterns that went unaddressed.
That is one of the most important things this episode can give you. Not just a training framework, but permission to expect more from your body than you currently do.
Self-test: balance.
Stand on one leg. Eyes open, 30 seconds without significant wobble. Then eyes closed for 10 seconds with reasonable stability is a meaningful benchmark.
Pillar five. Power. The ability to produce force quickly. Not just strength. Speed of force production.
Power is the physical quality that begins declining earliest, before strength declines significantly. Before cardiovascular fitness drops noticeably. Power is already fading.
Most people do not notice until they need it. The moment of almost falling and not catching yourself. Getting up, needing a second attempt. Reaching to grab something and not getting there fast enough. These are power failures.
Power training is one of the most effective stimuli for maintaining fast-twitch muscle fibre, the fibre type most susceptible to age-related loss.
The myth: weakness is an inevitable consequence of getting older. It is not.
The degree of decline most people experience is not driven by age. It is driven by inactivity. The body loses what it does not use. Consistently.
People in their fifties deadlifting. People in their seventies performing Olympic lifts. People in their eighties maintaining genuine strength programs. These are not genetic outliers. They are people who never stopped asking their bodies to adapt.
The variable is not age. The variable is the stimulus.
The most accessible way to start training power is through plyometric work.
Jump training. Explosive bodyweight movements. Medicine ball throws. Box jumps. Jump squats. Broad jumps. Lateral bounds.
These are not just for athletes. They are a direct training stimulus for the fast-twitch muscle fibres that decline earliest, and matter most for catching yourself when you trip, getting up quickly, and reacting to unexpected changes.
If this is new to you, start simple. A two-footed jump onto a low surface. A standing broad jump. A squat jump with a soft landing. Focus on the landing mechanics. Soft knees, hips, and back, absorbing through the lower body.
Two to three plyometric sessions per week, alongside your strength work, is the target.
You do not have to jump high. You have to jump consistently.
Self-test: power.
From a standard chair with no armrests, stand up and sit back down as many times as you can in 30 seconds. Do not use your hands.
Twelve or more repetitions is a reasonable working benchmark. Below eight warrants attention.
This is not just a strength test. The speed of the movement is what surfaces power. Do it as fast as you safely can. If you are slow or hesitating, that is the fast-twitch fibre telling you what it needs.
Not all exercise is equal. And the health and wellness industry has done a poor job of communicating this clearly.
Foundational exercise produces the specific physiological adaptations most critical for long-term health.
Progressive strength training is at the top of the category, without question.
Zone 2 cardiovascular training alongside it.
Daily movement, walking, standing, and general activity is the third foundational element.
Everything else sits in the supplementary category. Pilates, yoga, running, recreational sport, group fitness, dance, swimming, boxing, Zumba, all of it has genuine value. Movement is movement. Consistency and enjoyment matter enormously.
But the question worth asking yourself is simply this. Is the foundational work in place?
If yes, everything else adds to it. If not, everything else is building on sand.
We will dedicate a full episode to exactly where each of these sits in a complete longevity training approach, and how to layer them properly. That conversation deserves more than a paragraph. For now, know that the foundation comes first.
Choose the exercise you enjoy. But make sure you are also doing the exercise your future self needs.
And remember this. The best training program is not the most optimised one. It is the one you are still doing five years from now.
Performance without measurement is just effort. And effort without feedback is how people stay stuck.
These are practical benchmarks, starting points for understanding where you currently sit and tracking progress over time. Take this as information. Not judgment.
Strength markers.
Grip strength. If you have access to a dynamometer, a reasonable benchmark for women is 27 kilograms or above. For men, 40 kilograms or above. A reading below 20 kilograms for women and 30 kilograms for men warrants attention.
Practical proxy without a dynamometer: can you carry your full bodyweight in shopping bags for a sustained period without your grip failing? We covered why grip strength matters, as it correlates with the health of the entire system.
Push-up capacity. Full from your toes or modified from your knees, both are valid starting points. For full push-ups, ten to fifteen is a benchmark for women and twenty to twenty-five for men. For modified push-ups, 15 to 20 is a good starting point. What matters is where you are today, and the direction of travel from here.
Sit-to-stand test. Off the floor, how smoothly do you get up? How many times in 30 seconds?
Cardiovascular markers.
Resting heart rate. Below 60 bpm is excellent. Between 60 and 70 is good. Consistently above 80 at rest warrants attention.
VO2 Max estimate. Wearable devices provide reasonable estimates. Validated field tests: a 1.5km run for time gives a working number.
As a general reference, a VO2 Max above 35 for women and above 40 for men is a reasonable longevity-relevant starting target. Full context on what these numbers mean in a dedicated episode.
1km walk time. Walk one kilometre at your best sustainable pace on flat ground and time it. Under 10 minutes is a reasonable baseline. Under 8 minutes is good. Over 12 minutes warrants attention. No equipment needed. Do it today.
Mobility markers.
Deep squat hold. Feet shoulder-width apart, squat to full depth, hold for ten seconds without heels leaving the floor. Ten seconds at full depth comfortably is a good baseline. If you cannot reach depth, or your heels lift, ankle or hip mobility needs work.
Shoulder reach test. One hand over the shoulder and down your back. The other hand up from the lower back. Can your fingertips meet?
Balance marker.
Single-leg stand. Eyes open, 30 seconds without significant wobble is the target. Eyes closed for 10 seconds with reasonable stability is a meaningful benchmark. Test both legs. A significant difference between the sides is worth noting.
Power marker.
Sit-to-stand speed test. As described in the Power pillar, 12 or more repetitions in 30 seconds from a standard chair without using your hands. Below 8 warrants attention. Do it fast. The speed is the point.
Write them down. Test again in three months. The direction of travel over time matters more than any single measurement.
The Performance Loop does not exist in isolation.
What you build here is directly affected by the Recovery Loop. How well you sleep. How you manage your stress load. How much recovery capacity your nervous system has.
Training hard in the Performance Loop while neglecting Recovery is like trying to build a house while someone else is quietly dismantling it behind you.
The Performance Loop builds the physical foundation. Everything else in the system sits on top of it.
If you take one thing from today, let it be this.
Performance is not about how you look. It is not about an athletic identity you have to earn. It is about maintaining the physical capacity to do what matters to you for as long as possible.
The five pillars, strength, cardiovascular fitness, mobility, balance, and power, are not separate things to optimise in isolation. They interact. And when all five are being trained consistently, the compound effect on your quality of life is significant.
Take the performance scorecard from today. Run the tests. Write down your numbers. Come back in three months and run them again. The direction of travel is what matters.
And remember the list from the beginning of this episode. The things you want to be still able to do at seventy, eighty, ninety. That list is your training target. Everything else is the method.
If today's episode elevated your thinking, if something in it shifted how you see your health, share it with someone who needs to hear it.
Next week, we go deep on the Recovery Loop. Because the Performance Loop has a ceiling, and that ceiling is almost always set by how well you recover. Sleep. Stress. Nervous system regulation. What genuine recovery actually looks like.
Follow the show and stay in the loop.
This is Longevity Loop.
Fix your weakest loop.
Move smarter. Live longer.
I'll see you in the next one.