June 21, 2025
Your immune system is more than a cold-fighting machine.
It’s your body’s surveillance network, inflammation modulator, and recovery crew all rolled into one. Your immune system shapes how you age, how quickly you recover, how you sleep, your internal and external inflammation, and even how well your brain works.
It’s one of those things that you forget about when it’s working well. But when it doesn’t, there’s nothing else you think about.
The good news is you can train it. Modulate it. Improve it. Of course, it boils down to what most things boil down to: good habits.
Just about every issue we’ve published touches on immunity.
Let’s explore the full spectrum of immune health: what strengthens it, what sabotages it, and how to make yours more intelligent over time.
Immunity 101: How It Works
Your immune system is exactly that—a system. It’s a distributed network made up of cells, tissues, and signals that span nearly every part of your body, from bone marrow and the gut to your skin and lymph nodes.
There are two main arms:
• Innate immunity is your first responder. It acts fast and broadly. It doesn’t care what the invader is; it just wants it gone. Think of inflammation, fever, and the mobilisation of white blood cells for cuts and bruises.
• Adaptive immunity is your specialist team. It learns from past encounters and remembers pathogens for years or even decades. It creates antibodies and immune memory (via T-cells and B-cells) to respond more efficiently to future threats. This is why, for instance, you typically get chickenpox only once. Your adaptive immune system filed that threat away in its permanent memory bank.
These two arms work together. Ideally, innate immunity holds the line while adaptive immunity gears up a specific defence.
But here’s the nuance: A healthy immune system isn’t one that’s always “strong.” It’s one that’s well-regulated. It knows when to act and when to stand down.
With age, immune responses get slower and less precise This decline is called immunosenescence.
Much of what we call “aging” is really this slow drift into immune dysfunction. Understanding how the system works is the first step to supporting it intelligently.
The Foundations of Immune Health
The real foundation of immune resilience isn’t found in pills and powders; it’s built from your daily habits. Sleep, food, movement, stress, relationships, and gut health are what create the conditions for a responsive, regulated immune system.
You don’t need to be perfect. But consistency compounds, and that’s the basis of a strong anything.
Sleep
Sleep is when your immune system does its most important work. During deep sleep, your body produces cytokines that fight infection and inflammation, while your brain’s glymphatic system clears metabolic waste.
Your immune system runs on a circadian rhythm, with key immune cells rising and falling in sync with your sleep-wake cycle. Sleep is so critical to immune function that those who sleep less than 6 hours nightly are 4x more likely to catch a cold.
Growth hormone, released during deep sleep, stimulates immune cell production. Memory T-cells and B-cells consolidate their “training” during sleep. Sleep also reduces natural killer cell activity by 72% with just one night of 4-hour sleep.
→ The Sleep Issue breaks down exactly how to get deeper sleep and stronger immunity.
Nutrition
You are what you eat. And your immune system is metabolically expensive, meaning it requires specific nutrients to function optimally.
Micronutrients like vitamins C, D, zinc, and selenium are essential to immune cell function. Fibre feeds gut bacteria, which in turn regulate immune balance. Too many ultra-processed foods can trigger low-grade inflammation.
Eat whole foods. Emphasise plants, legumes, nuts, and fermented items. Eat foods full of polyphenols, vitamins and flavonoids. Think nourishment, not restriction.
→ Explore The Superfoods Issue for the world’s most powerful immunity-boosting foods.
Exercise
Exercise is one of the most powerful immune modulators available. Regular movement increases circulation, helping immune cells patrol your body more effectively, while also reducing chronic inflammation.
Exercise enhances immunity by increasing production of antibodies and white blood cells; raising body temperature during and after, which may help fight infections; reducing stress hormones that suppress immune function; and improving sleep quality.
→ Guess what? We did an entire issue on fitness for longevity.
Stress
Acute stress can be helpful. Chronic stress, not so much. When stress hormones like cortisol remain elevated, they suppress immune function and increase inflammation.
Chronic stress also shortens telomeres, accelerating cellular aging. Daily stress hygiene matters: breathwork, meditation, nature walks, creative time. Even a few deep breaths can shift your state.
Gut Health
Roughly 70% of your immune system lives in your gut. The microbiome helps regulate inflammation, train immune cells, and maintain tolerance.
Feed it with fibre, polyphenols, and fermented foods.
Social Connection
Humans are inherently social creatures, and meaningful relationships actually boost immune resilience. Socially connected people have stronger antibody responses to vaccines, and social support is shown to reduce stress hormones.
Strategies for Immune Optimisation
Intermittent Fasting
Emerging research suggests that periodic fasting may help “reset” the immune system by promoting autophagy—the cellular cleanup process that removes damaged components.
Fasting can reduce chronic inflammation, promote regeneration of immune cells, clear senescent (aged) cells, and improve metabolic health, which supports immune function.
But be careful, extreme or prolonged fasting may be detrimental to immune function.
Temperature Therapy
Both heat and cold exposure create beneficial stress that strengthens your immune system through hormesis—the process where mild stressors make you more resilient.
Sauna use has some of the most compelling research for immune enhancement and longevity. Regular sauna sessions create beneficial heat stress that strengthens your immune system
.Micronutrient Optimization
While a healthy diet should provide most nutrients, certain supplements may support immune function, especially as we age:
• Vitamin D3 boosts your immune system by activating pathogen-fighting cells and reducing harmful inflammation. Without it, your defences stay sluggish and overreactive.
• Omega-3 fatty acids support anti-inflammatory processes and immune cell membrane function
• Probiotics may help maintain gut barrier function and immune balance.
• Prebiotics strengthen immunity by feeding gut bacteria that produce short-chain fatty acids, which calm inflammation and help regulate immune responses. A healthier gut means a smarter, more balanced immune system.
• Magnesium supports over 300 enzymatic reactions, including those involved in immune function.
Always consult healthcare providers before starting supplements, especially if you have health conditions or take medications.
→ We did a very deep dive on the best Supplements for Immunity.
Meditation
Meditation isn’t just about stress relief—it’s one of the most scientifically validated ways to directly enhance immune function. Recent research shows that mindfulness meditation produces measurable changes in immune system activity, including reduced inflammation markers and increased immune cell function.
A groundbreaking University of Florida study found that just eight days of intensive meditation caused robust activation of the immune system
Nasal Breathing
One of the simplest yet most overlooked immune practices is how you breathe. Your nose isn’t just for smelling—it’s a sophisticated filtration and immune enhancement system.
Nasal breathing activates multiple immune benefits including natural air filtration through nasal hairs and mucous membranes that trap pathogens, nitric oxide production with powerful antimicrobial properties, and air conditioning that warms and humidifies incoming air.
Practice conscious nasal breathing during daily activities, consider mouth taping at night if you’re a chronic mouth breather (consult a healthcare provider for sleep apnoea concerns), and try alternate nostril breathing exercises for 5–10 minutes daily.
Red Flags to Monitor
Watch for these warning signs that your immune system may be compromised:
• Getting sick more than 3 times per year
• Infections that are unusually severe or long-lasting
• Slow wound healing
• Persistent fatigue despite adequate sleep
• Frequent digestive issues
• Skin problems like eczema or frequent breakouts
• Allergies that are worsening or new food sensitivities
The Bottom Line
Your immune system is writing your health future with every choice you make today.
Unlike some aspects of aging, immune resilience isn’t fixed or fated. It’s adaptive. Forgiving. And remarkably responsive—even decades into life.
The immune system rewards consistency. Not perfection.
It remembers what you teach it. T-cells trained now will still be smarter years from now. Gut diversity you build this season becomes a living archive of defences for later.
Even better? It’s never too late to begin.
The goal isn’t to avoid every illness. The goal is to build a body that knows how to recover.
That’s what a strong immune legacy looks like: not fragile and reactive, but calm, capable, and prepared.
Disclaimer: This newsletter is provided for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute providing medical advice or professional services. The information provided should not be used for diagnosing or treating a health problem or disease, and those seeking personal medical advice should consult with a licensed physician.