
Complete Human, or Why Stop Doing the Things You’re Already Good At
- Effortless Superhuman
The Short Story
The Long Story
βMexican Proverb
βGoing from where you are now to moderately fit will change your life. It will make everything else better. Even doubling your income or gaining 30 IQ points overnight wonβt make for as great of a life improvement. You need to stop doing more of the things youβre already good at and closing your most obvious gaps.β I answered (note that in a business setting advice would be diametrically opposed to this).
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The Epiphany
“Thereβs nothing better when something comes and hits you and you think βYESβ!” βJ.K. Rowling
Final Fantasy VII hit the shelves in November 1997. I had been waiting for that video game for months, and it did not disappoint. That game was crystalized perfection. I made sure never to play it again since then. I didnβt want to taint its glorious memory. To this day, I hadnβt encountered any work of fiction that made me more emotional than when Sephiroth killed Aerith. I was in such shock at that time as it came out of nowhere; if my memory serves me right, it took me a solid five minutes until I mustered enough composure to insert the second compact disc into my vintage Sony PlayStation One. After all, I needed to continue the path of light and eventually gather enough skills to bestow complete retribution upon the murderer. To this day, 23 years later, even hearing some of the original soundtrack pieces that made it into the pop culture takes me back to that jovial time of video gaming adventures and digital camaraderie. It was a magnificent piece of work through and through. Final Fantasy VII is one of those old-school role-playing games (RPG). Gameplay centered around, as most RPGs do, completing adventures, gaining experience, learning skills, and developing your character. Iβm probably doing a miserable job at remembering the mechanics of the game, but it doesnβt matter. Characters in RPGs have a series of attributes that you want to increase. Since that game was a couple of tiers before the advent of online social gamingβββthink World of Warcraft, where you develop highly specialized characters, it was mostly geared toward building a balanced character. The latter was neither excellent nor mediocre at any particular skill but shined by its great overall balance. There is a game-like quality to life.Β
Constructing Jason Bourne
“A gap in skills and abilities reveals a golden opportunity!“
βΒ Abhishek Ratna
Weβre not here to talk about video games, however. Weβre here to talk about the conscious choice of stopping to be a partial human being. When you think about it, nothing is stopping you from being impossibly athletic, extravagantly well-read, ridiculously eloquent in many languages, decent at dancing, able to land a small aircraft, reckless enough to perform wheelies on motorbikes, fair at riding horses, excellent at not making them kick you, able to break a jaw in a bar fight, and generally good at a series of other life skills. Overall, nothing is stopping you from being good at a great many things.
One of my life goals, besides living to 130βββmore on that at later stages, is to be the Swiss army knife of life. Or, as I put it somewhat less presumptuously: to get fairly average at every meaningful activity, from growing tomatoes to coding in Swift through piloting helicopters. If youβre thinking, why would you content yourself with being average when you can pursue excellence? Thereβs a phrase from the biohacking subculture that comes to mind: βperfect is the enemy of the good.β The phrase is attributed to Voltaire, as far as we know. Biohackers hastily incorporated it into their ethos since it fits quite well with their extremely developed awareness of opportunity costs.
Primarily, if you work in a corporate environment, where specialized skills are highly appreciated, you probably disagree vehemently with my generalist approach. I donβt blame you. Itβs understandable. Maybe I can do a decent job at laying down an alternative way of thinking, though. Perhaps not; Iβll make it entertaining, however.
Before you google how much a Cessna 172 costsβββabout the price of a Ferrari F8, let me reassure you; you donβt need to go for some kind of arbitrary full completion. Piloting airplanes is only relevant if itβs one of your life goals. Besides, helicopters are probably more useful. When you think about it, helicopters are the ultimate screw-you-guys-Iβ m-going-home, to put it in the ever-poetic and inspirational words of the great Bill Burr mixed with the obnoxious Eric Cartman.
Some things are nice-to-have. Some other things are must-haves. Letβs talk about the starting block, the bare minimum, for being a complete human first.
As a short aside before going on here, click the following for a short and sweet list of valuable life skills you can earn while getting paid.

Must Be This High to Ride
“No man has the right to be an amateur in the matter of physical training. It is a shame for a man to grow old without seeing the beauty and strength of which his body is capable.“
β Socrates
As far as I know, physicality is still a massive part of life. Physical fitness is the foundation upon which everything else rests. Far too often, you see people who simply ignore it. Maybe because of society, perhaps because theyβve always been mediocre at sports and they just wrote it off in some sort of viciously destructive feedback loop.
Modern society plays a substantial detrimental role in this, as well. Somehow, it seems to imply that the mind trades off with the body. When we see a muscular man, we immediately tend to associate him with lesser cognitive capacity. When we see a thin man, we will quickly associate him with artistic pursuits and higher intellectual capacity. Our human brains love simplicity and speed. Thereβs nothing wrong with that. The very mechanism that allows us to judge fast is the same mechanism that allowed us to survive in times when a split-second decision between friend or foe could be a matter of life or death. However, we need to be able to overrule antiquated thinking paths to progress on both the human evolution ladder and the somewhat shorter personal development ladder.
I donβt know exactly where the idea that mind and body trade-off arose. Maybe it came from times when being tanned and strong was the plight of the peasants. As they were working their hands to the bone in the fields, the nobility was indoors engaging toward scholarly pursuits. As a result, nobles became quite pale and frail. Those times, when nobles became so light that you could see their veins through their almost translucid sun-deprived skin, also gave us the term Sangre azul in Spanish, which then was translated into the English phrase blue blood. But I digress again.
In reality, fit people can be quite literate and overall accomplished at a great many things. The reverse is also true. I have no reason to believe that out of shape, or even obese people have some magical superior cognitive skills. The opposite might be right. With all the things we know about the adverse effects of caloric excess and obesity, how smart can you be if you chose to ignore the body? Also, the arbitrary split between intellectual and physical pursuits makes no sense. Your mind is your body, and your body is your mind. If itβs a great sin to be dull in a well-kept body, itβs equally as high a sin to have a beautiful soul trapped in a frame made of pure dogshit.
Letβs take a look at professional rugby players, for example. Some people would argue that none of those people is going to end up winning a spelling bee contest any time soon. I would be careful with that kind of premade thinking. First, anything mainstream is wrong. Especially nowadays: everything has to fit a four-second attention span of the likes of βanabolic steroids are badβ or βred meat is unhealthy.β Anabolic steroids are, on the one hand, medical drugs used in the treatment of a great many viral or degenerative diseases. On the other hand, they are performance-enhancing drugs that can give male bodybuilders the ability to breastfeed, when used massively. Theyβre not just one thing. The same applies to red meat. It stands to reason that eating organic grass-fed liverβββone of the most nutrient-dense foodsβββis vastly different from eating a factory-farmed sausage made out of 13 different antibiotic-loaded pig buttholesβββdifferent things.
Letβs take a second to get back to our example of the ruby player. Running at maximum speed while delicately smashing your elbow against another gentlemanβs face and gracefully catching an oval ballβββof all the shapes it had to be ovalβββwith your free hand is an excellent display of a fantastic, magnificently functional, nervous system. Every single synaptic connection has to be working in perfect unisonβββa grand synaptic symphonyβββfor those giant men to be able to perform those formidable athletic feats. Itβs, by all means, a sign of high cognition and a perfectly functioning mind.
You might feel that Iβm focusing heavily on the body. Youβre right. In the information age, I donβt need to explain to you that acquiring, processing, retaining, and retrieving information are primordial life skills. For instance, Marcoβs Grounds, as Iβm sure you know, specializes in making dietary supplements that support cognitive functions (also called nootropics or smart drugs). We make MAXIMUM MINDΒ to help hone those skills and push them further. However, choosing to ignore physicality entirely will always result in a miserable life, at any rate. Being impossibly out of shape is no way to go through life. Assuming happiness is a life goalβββitβs a reasonably safe assumption as I havenβt met anyone who wants to be actively unhappy, thereβs no way to reach it while being out of shape.
Further, even if maximizing only the mind is your goal. Itβs a foolβs errand if you ask me, but letβs play with that thought. Regular exercise, regular movement, help tame our monkey minds, and focus better. For instance, have you ever talked on the phone, and when the conversation became somewhat intense, you stood up and started pacing back and forth, because it helped you process the conversation more effectively? Thatβs the soothing and mental processing boost of physical movement at play. Ernest Hemingway used to write at a standing desk, as he stated, it helped his creativity.
Iβm sure youβve heard people, as I have, say things of the likes of βphysicality is not that important; Iβd rather focus on less shallow intellectual pursuits.β Itβs a ridiculous statement, faintly veiling profound underlying laziness and revealing creative thinking only geared toward justifying that laziness. Anyone who knows anything about brain processing capacity knows that, among others, ketonesβββthe result of ketosisβββincrease mental acuity, roughly speaking, and that regular exercise increases mental resilience and focus.
I might be sounding a bit harsh. It comes from a place of love, rest assured. Also, Iβm writing this for you as much as Iβm writing this for myself. I need to keep me in check, too. I need to stop rationalizing away exercise and fitness, as well. Itβs not about vanity, like most people, I included, would retort, in a pointless, lazy effort to discard it. Itβs about a complete life. Itβs about total wellbeing. Itβs about finally having that peaceful and serene rest because you got all the things done and have no glaring weaknesses anymore.

Natureβs Call
“By discovering nature, you discover yourself.“
β Maxime LagacΓ©
Taller is always better than shorter, and fitter is always better than fatter. Thereβs nothing you can do about height. But you can surely get reasonably fit. Itβs not witchcraft. You donβt need to keep being out of shape because youβve always been that way. What most people seem to think is that you need to look like a fitness model to be in shape. Thatβs nonsense. Being that impossibly ripped is just the other side of the same useless coin. Also, since that kind of look is unattainable for most people, they get discouraged and donβt bother starting their path toward physical fitness, which let me remind you, is just the bare minimum for constructing your own Jason Bourne.
First, everyone should meet a couple of fitness models. Meeting those people is, more often than not, extremely underwhelming. Second, what those people are to real human fitness is what a steroid ridden pit bull is to a wolf. You kind of see features of the real deal in there, but you also somewhat know itβs not the real deal. The pit bull is ridiculously massive, docile, and tame. You can make it do little tricks, and it obeys you. It needs you to live. It canβt even run for more than a couple of minutes without getting utterly exhausted. Thereβs zero chance it would survive in the wild. Not only because itβs unable to get enough food to sustain its inflated body, but also because more adapted predators would tear through it like a warm knife through butter. Wolves have been routinely observed eating dogs, for instance.
A wolf, on the other hand, is an entirely different animal. Itβs a highly evolved apex predators perfectly adapted to dominate its environment. Thereβs no such thing as taming wolves. A wolf either agrees with you or it doesnβt. It also doesnβt pack the most impressive of looks. Yet, it can run for kilometers and kilometers after preys without seeming bothered and has a jaw that can pulverize a bullβs femur: a wolfβs bite is five to six times stronger than the hardest of dog bites. Just imagine what one bite would do to a human arm, and thereβs never only one bite or only one wolf. Itβs similar to you biting in a chicken wing. You notice the bone is there, but all you need to do is ever so slightly close your mouth, and it snaps. Long story short: one is all show the other is all go.
I cannot put my finger exactly on it. But I know nature has a way to recognize and ridicule artificiality. Much like the analogy of the pitbull and the wolf, if you were to compare the looks of, for example, a Charles Branson in movies like Chatoβs Land or Hard Times with a current-day fitness model or bodybuilder you would probably come to the same conclusion. One looks like the rugged and hardened real deal, shaped and molded by natureβββthe other looks like an inflated mimic with a mild addiction to baby oil and a selfie-sticks.
I love bodybuilders, though. Thereβs so much to learn from them. They are masterful artists of adding muscle and subtracting fat while using their bodies as a canvas to paint the limits of the human body. But there also is a considerable difference between bodybuilding and real capable human bodies.

Homo Invictus
“Strength does not come from physical capacity. It comes from an indomitable will.“
β Mahatma Gandhi
My idea of physical fitness is simple: human fitness is attained by doing what our species naturally evolved to do in our natural habitat. Humans are endurance hunters with humongous brains. You might not know this, but we used to run after prey for so long as it took for them to collapse of overheating. It was a remarkably effective hunting strategy for millions of yearsβββcompared to the five to six millennia of agricultural civilization in our shared history. Human beings are one of a kind in the animal kingdom. Not only because of our fantastic brain but also because we have natureβs best cooling system. It makes us able to run longer and further than any other mammal on the planet. The loss of fur might have helped.
If you were to ask yourself whatβs perfect physical fitness, you would come to an answer along the following lines. Great physicality is functional. It displays both adequate endurances to hunt animals, or chop wood for a long time and enough strength and speed to, for example, effectively run after children to keep them out of harmβs way. It certainly has no tolerance for unnecessary weight, be it muscle mass or adipose tissue. It also displays cues of good health and hints at a long and healthy life. High fitness is also the consequence of a beautiful mind. It shows, among others, pronounced consciousness, discipline, and empathy.
This description of an able body capable of both good endurance and good explosivity might seem arbitrary to you at this point. After all, how would it look like in the information age? My argument rests on a little trickster of evolution called female choice. Female choice is the evolutionary biology phenomenon by which women chose the traits they want to see more in future generations by choosing those traits in their mates, i.e., men. If you donβt understand how that works, I recommend spending more time at night on the internet. By doing so, women replicate those desirable traits down further generations. It would result that the DNA of women who wanted the most useful characteristics would be more likely to live on and thrive, while the DNA of women who chose fewer valuable traits would be less likely to survive. It is believed that while most human females pass on their genes, only about half of human males have done so. I guess the other half simply had undesirable DNA swimming around in their testicles. If evolutionary biology, trait selection, and the likes strike your fancy, consider reading the early 2000βs classic that is The Mating Mind by the great and hauntingly eloquent Geoffrey Miller.
Since female choice is what shaped the human male throughout evolution, it would stand to reason that the purest form of evolutionary fitnessβββfitness in the Darwinian sense of the term and not in the gym rat sense, are the physical traits that human females come to like. After all, those shapes sustained the harsh trial of nature and time with its constant conflict and resolution. According to a study published in the American Journal of Human Biology, the physical traits women like the most on average throughout their ovulatory cycle are crystallized into something close to the shape of a male swimmer, i.e., reasonably lean, a bit of muscle mass, a bit of fat [1].
Itβs kind of amusing to note that the shapes women like are quite different from the shapes men think women like, i.e., extraordinarily muscular and freakishly lean. When you account for a bit of variation, i.e., in my view, what women say they want the most on average and what they end up doing are different things. To be fair, the same applies to men. Human brains, in general, have a fantastic capacity at fooling themselves. In my anecdotal experience, when women are at peak fertility and the concentration of luteinizing hormone (LH)βββI jokingly call LH the hormone of horninessβββrushing through their bloodstream is overriding the decision-making process, things are a bit different. At that time of the month, women tend to like men slightly more muscularβββemphasizing slightly, displaying cues of aggression, i.e., square jaw, stern look, less agreeable, and marginally hairier. If I need to explain to you why that is, I prescribe, similarly to above: talking to your parents and spending more time watching television or on the internet. A lean and robust body represents the promise of decent work outputs without getting tired too fast by excess muscle or fat. A lean and healthy body makes it possible to adequately protect children, hunt mammals, gather plants, perform social activities, make her come, etc.
Iβm using womenβs preferences in men to extrapolate what constitutes perfect male fitness. You might disagree with my argument. It doesnβt matter. At the end of the day, if itβs slightly more muscular or slightly less, itβs irrelevant in the grand scheme of things. What matters is leanness and strength. That is excellent news for everyone. When we remove all the noise from the anabolic steroid gluttons on Instagramβββboth male and femaleβββor broadly on the general internet, all we need is functionality, a bit of muscle, and be reasonably lean. Those are easily attainable goals. Itβs definitely within your grasp with just a couple of minutes a day.

Cutting Through the Superfluous
“Perfection is achieved, not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away.“
β Antoine de Saint-ExupΓ©ry
Nearly 130 years ago, Vilfredo Pareto demonstrated it in his work Cours dβ Γconomie Politique (original one on Amazon for $6000) by showing that 20% of landlords in Italy owned 80% of the land. You can see this principle roughly in different aspects of life. In academia, approximately 20% of researchers produce 80% of the peer-reviewed published literature. In fundraising, for example, roughly 20% of donors amount to 80% of amounts raised. In learning a language, it gets even better. For instance, in Spanish, 6000 words, or 1% of Spanish words, repeat themselves continuously in around 86% of conversations. You get the idea.
If you apply the 80/20 principle to your life completeness goals, starting with getting and staying fit is ridiculously simple. If you use the 80/20 principle to your overall life, you could ask yourself this question: what are the 20% of things in your life that give you 80% of dissatisfaction? You could also ask yourself the reversal of that question: what are the 80% of things I do that just bring me 20% of satisfaction? Iβm legendary for my laziness. I would work on those fronts first, thus applying the maximum effect for minimum effort.
There are diminishing returns to everything. Once youβre generating $ 100’000 yearly income, $ 10’000 more wonβt matter as much as when youβre earning $ 30’000. The same applies to fitness or any other aspect of life, for that matter. When it comes to fitness, itβs undoubtedly more satisfying and easy to go from out of shape, out of breath after walking up a single flight of stairs to fit than it is to go from six-pack to eight-pack abs, genetics willing. In your quest to refuse to be a partial human being, you just need to work on your most significant most obvious shortcomings firsts. If youβre already fit, as described above, i.e., reasonably lean and functional. Then obviously, you can cross the fitness topic off the to-do list and pursue other goals. If youβre not fit, work on it first. The body doesnβt make the man. The mind makes the man. But great minds also maintain great bodies. There just seems to be something with being healthy, feeling powerful and in control, that makes us humans so annoyingly happy. I cannot recommend it enough.
You do need a bit of patience, however, if youβre extraordinarily unfit or even obese. After all, that weight didnβt come all at once. It wonβt go away all at once, either. However, you can achieve reasonable fitness in as little as 10 minutes a day without spending any money on supplements or gym memberships. You cannot become the best or even great at anything in 10 minutes a day. Letβs keep it real. However, you can get healthier, leaner, and stronger in that time. Just be mindful of the superlatives.

Sweetening the Pot
“Diversification is protection against ignorance. It makes little sense if you know what you are doing.“
β Warren Buffet
You can achieve reasonable fitness with one jumping rope, one kettlebell, one pull-up bar, and two resistance bands. Thereβs no need for fancy exercises or spiritual breakthroughsβββchopping wood still does wonder to the abs and the mind. All those things together, aside from the kettlebell, cost less than $40. Kettlebells get expensive if you are superhumanly strong. For most men, a 24 kilograms kettlebellβββ12 kilograms for womenβββis all it takes to achieve functional fitness. Have a look at Marcoβs Kettlebell Minimalism. Itβs the most straightforward, leanest fitness program under the sun. It will get most people to reasonable levels of fitness at minimal time or money investments. The icing on the cake: you can do it at home if you decide to get or make a kettlebell. When you know what youβre doing, exercise doesnβt need to be complicated. Add to the kettlebell work a couple of 10-minute sessions of jumping rope while watching your favorite show on Netflix, and youβll even get leaner faster.
Even if you donβt read any of those, doing the following will almost certainly yield results;
reduce sugars and artificial sweeteners intake;
pay more attention to sleep hygiene; and
do a bit more exercise.
There are also plenty of great resources on YouTube. They all work, aside from the ridiculous ones. Just donβt spend too much time splitting hairs and trying to dig out the ultimate one. You could be doing air squats and pushups in that time.
When it comes to fitness, almost anything works for at least a particular time. Also, if you never worked with a professional trainer, I would highly recommend doing so. They will teach you basic form, give you primers into basic nutrition science, and last but not least, they will hold you accountable. If youβre unsure, professional trainers will make your pursuit toward becoming a complete human safer. You also donβt need to spend all your life with a personal trainer. A couple of sessions are enough.
Just remember that most men tend to think more muscle is necessary while every reliable observation points to the contrary. Also, keep in mind that in your quest for a great many life skills, extremes are the enemy. While being a large fat beast hurts you the mostβββboth physically and socially, being ridiculously fit with deep cut abs also hurts you. The first one projects self-hatred, low consciousness, and little discipline. The other one hints at narcissistic obsession and unresolved insecurities.
To some extent, both are annoying addictions. Going to the gym six days a week is mental lazinessβββunless itβs your actual professionβββjust as much as doing nothing is physical laziness. When youβre already good at something, itβs time to start something new. Thereβs no point in polishing your already acquired medals. You could keep your vanity in check, achieve a reasonable level of real human fitness while pursuing other activities with all the free time. Aside from your ego, nobody cares about a one percent body fat drop or four veins on your abs instead of two. While physical fitness is of tremendous importance, overdoing it might be as great a sin as not doing it at all.
Itβs within your grasp to make it happen and to refuse to become that fat middle-aged guy in the red BWM convertible who wakes up sweaty and in panic in the middle of the night, wondering which arms is the wrong one to be sensing a tingling pain in. You can refuse to be a partial human being. The hardest part is coming to that realization.

MAXIMUM MIND
Clinically Studied
Pharmaceutical Grade Cognitive and Mind Enhancing Complex
Made in Switzerland
Literature
Dixson, B. J., Dixson, A. F., Li, B., & Anderson, M. J. (2007). Studies of human physique and sexual attractiveness: Sexual preferences of men and women. American Journal of Human Biology, 19(1), 88β95.
About the Author
DISCLAIMER
The materials and information provided in this post, document and/or any other communication (βCommunicationβ) from Marcoβs Grounds LLC. or any related entity or person (collectively βMarcoβs Groundsβ) are strictly for informational purposes only and are not intended for use as diagnosis, prevention or treatment of a health problem or as a substitute for consulting a qualified medical professional. Some of the concepts presented herein may be theoretical.
References to any non-Marcoβs Grounds entity, product, service, person or source of information in this or any other Communication should not be considered an endorsement, either direct or implied, by the host, presenter or distributor of the Communication. The host(s), presenter(s) and/or distributor(s) of this Communication are not responsible for the content of any non-Marcoβs Grounds internet pages referenced in the Communication. Marcoβs Grounds is not liable or responsible for any advice, course of treatment, diagnosis or any other information or services you chose to follow without consulting a qualified medical professional. Before starting any new diet and/or exercise program, always be sure to check with your qualified medical professional.
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