Four systems. One cycle.
Performance is not the result of one habit or one productivity method. It emerges from the interaction between four systems.

- Curiosity
- Courage
- Experimentation
- Clear Thinking
Clear thinking leads to better decisions.
- Sleep
- Movement
- Recovery
- Energy Management
Energy creates clarity and execution.
- Focus
- Consistency
- Completion
- Better Decisions
Better execution builds momentum.
- Trust
- Communication
- Connection
- Relationships
Strong relationships multiply results.
Mental System
Attention, clarity, interpretation, and emotional regulation. The mental system determines how you meet the day before you act on it.
- Curiosity
- Courage
- Experimentation
- Clear Thinking
Clear thinking leads to better decisions.
- Constant input, little synthesis
- Reactive interpretation of events
- Difficulty holding a single thought
- Emotional volatility under pressure
- Fewer inputs, deeper attention
- Considered interpretation of events
- Space between stimulus and response
- Stable emotion under pressure
- 01Attention is a limited budget.
- 02Reduce inputs before increasing effort.
- 03Interpretation is a choice, not a reflex.

Energy System
Sleep, movement, recovery, and physical rhythm. Energy is not a mood — it is the infrastructure everything else runs on.
- Sleep
- Movement
- Recovery
- Energy Management
Energy creates clarity and execution.
- Sleep is the first thing negotiated away
- Movement is squeezed into gaps
- Recovery treated as a reward
- Constant low-grade fatigue
- Sleep protected as infrastructure
- Movement built into the week
- Recovery designed, not deferred
- Sustainable daily capacity
- 01Energy is a system, not a mood.
- 02Recovery is production, not indulgence.
- 03Rhythm beats intensity.

Execution System
Priorities, decisions, structure, and consistency. Execution is what remains once operational noise is removed.
- Focus
- Consistency
- Completion
- Better Decisions
Better execution builds momentum.
- Too many priorities, none clear
- Decisions made under pressure
- Meetings replace thinking
- Constant switching, little completion
- Few priorities, clearly named
- Decisions made in calmer moments
- Time protected for thinking
- Fewer switches, more completion
- 01Clarity before speed.
- 02Ownership before optimisation.
- 03Fewer things, finished.

Start with the right system.
A problem in one system often appears as a problem in another. Diagnosing the wrong system is the most common source of wasted effort — this matrix helps you start where it matters.

A simple sequence. Practised consistently.
The systems layer in a natural order — clear thinking sets direction, energy fuels it, execution delivers it, and relationships multiply it. The result is sustainable performance.

The full decision matrix.
A single-page reference for spotting which system needs attention and the first actions to take.

Social System
Communication, trust, boundaries, and presence. Relationships are infrastructure — they carry every other system.
Strong relationships multiply results.