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Stephanie Samels
Stephanie Samels

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When Code, Coffee, and Burnout Collide & What I Learned About Taking Care of My Developer Body

Somewhere between my tenth bug of the day and my fourth cup of coffee, I realized something quietly disturbing:

I was treating my IDE better than my own body.

I upgraded my editor themes, optimized my VS Code plugins, tuned my terminal workflow like a race car…
but my actual brain — the processor behind it all — was running on junk code: caffeine, random meals, and terrible sleep.

We talk so much about speed, memory, uptime, efficiency, compiling faster, shipping faster…

But what good is a powerful machine if the operator is running at 30% battery?

That realization didn’t hit me during some dramatic burnout moment.
It was much quieter.

It happened during a normal weekday evening — when I sat down, tried to focus, and my brain felt like I was typing through mud.
Thoughts lagging.
Eyes burning.
Mood flat.
Like life had gone grayscale for a moment.

And it wasn’t a "motivation issue."
It was a system health issue — mine.

Developers Love Optimization — Until It’s About Their Body

We optimize code.
We optimize workflows.
We automate everything possible.

But we don’t optimize ourselves — the person behind the keyboard.

I used to joke that being a developer meant:

Coffee in place of water

Sitting for 10 hours, standing for 0

Blue light as a constant roommate

“I'll sleep after I fix this function”

Calling 2-minute desk stretches “exercise”

Turns out the body doesn't find that funny.

There comes a point where your focus becomes fog, your motivation becomes drag, and your creativity — that spark developers rely on — flickers.

That’s when most people panic and try motivation hacks.

But brains don’t run on motivational memes.
They run on chemistry, sleep, nutrients, movement, oxygen — pretty basic stuff.

Supplements Entered My Life Quietly — No Magic Promises

I didn’t wake up one day saying,

“Let me improve my life with supplements today.”

It was more like:

“My eyes are tired. My energy feels fake. My sleep sucks. I can build billion-line systems but can’t build a balanced day.”

I started small — Omega-3, Vitamin D, and Magnesium.
Not as “hacks” but as support.

And yes, I leaned toward Nature’s Bounty because it felt like a brand with fewer games and more honesty — nothing dramatic, no crazy claims, just formulas people trust.

I didn’t expect a miracle.
I expected maybe nothing.

But over weeks, without fanfare:

My focus stretched longer without feeling glued

Eye strain felt slightly less brutal

Deep sleep became real sleep again

My “brain buffer lag” softened

Code reviews didn’t feel mentally expensive anymore

Mood swings smoothed out a bit

Was it only supplements?
No.
I also drank real water, ate real food, and moved my body more than my mouse.

But the supplements helped — like finally giving your system the libraries it needs rather than forcing it to compile raw stress all day.

It felt like my brain got a clean stylesheet.

Not flashy.
Just… smoother. Clearer. More human.

No, Supplements Don’t Make You 10x — Taking Care of Yourself Does

Let’s be honest:

Supplements won't turn a tired dev into Elon Musk or John Carmack.

But giving your body what it quietly needed all along?

That changes how you feel when you:

Open your laptop

Face a problem that used to overwhelm you

Walk away from a screen without feeling drained

Wake up without fighting gravity and fatigue

Developers don’t need hype.
We need consistency, clarity, calmness, stamina.

That’s what improved — not dramatically, but steadily, like upgrading your CPU thermal paste.
Most people don’t notice, but everything runs better.

A Final Thought for the Dev Reading This at 2 AM

There’s no productivity hack more powerful than:

A functioning brain

A rested mind

A body not forgotten

A nervous system not fried

A mood with breathing room

Our work is mental — but our brain is physical.
It needs support.

Not a miracle.
Just respect.

If you’re reading this tired, foggy, living on caffeine, and wondering why motivation feels farther lately — it’s not laziness.

You’re just a system overdue for maintenance.

Write code.
Build ideas.
Create.
But don’t forget the machine running it all — you.

Nature’s Bounty wasn't my solution —
taking my health seriously was.

They were simply one tool I chose along the way.
Quiet support. Nothing dramatic.

And sometimes, quiet support is exactly what a developer needs.

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