More than twenty years ago I was living in a townhouse in Charleston, South Carolina. It was winter. I was walking to the grocery store, a walk I had taken dozens of times, when I passed a yard with flowers blooming in the cold. Something moved through me that I did not have a name for yet, and I heard myself say out loud, without planning it: I am surrounded by beautiful blooming flowers. Present tense. Not a wish. A declaration.
I have said it ever since. In apartments, in homes I owned, in cities I was passing through, in the years when it felt like a stretch and the years when it felt obvious. It is the first affirmation that ever came out of my mouth on its own, and in more than twenty years it has never once been wrong. I have always been, in some form, surrounded by beautiful blooming flowers.
This week a sleet storm moved through Roanoke at the end of winter and knocked hundreds of daffodils flat in my yard. The house I live in here is the second home this ground has known. The first family built it, lived here, and planted bulbs in this soil for fifty years before I arrived. I inherited their work without ever knowing them. When I walked outside after the storm and saw all those daffodils bent sideways and face-down in the mud, I did not mourn them. I cut them and brought them inside. Every room in this house smells like spring right now.
The Charleston affirmation taught me something I did not fully understand at the time. An affirmation is not a request. It is a decision about what you are willing to see. I said I was surrounded by beautiful blooming flowers and that trained me to find them, in every season, in every city, in every year that followed. My mantra works the same way. Creating is my superpower. It fuels my freedom. It deepens my connections. It brings flow to everything that I do. I did not decide that was true. I became still enough to hear it, and then I said it out loud.
The storm did not take the daffodils. It brought them inside. That is worth paying attention to.
In Issue 4 I told you about the cold scalp rinse, the quiet daily practice I picked up after years of returning to the cold plunge at that Budapest bathhouse. This issue I want to go one layer deeper.
Here it is: splash cold water on your face tonight before bed. Not a cold shower. Not a plunge. Your bathroom sink. Cold water, cupped in your hands, splashed directly on your face and held for thirty seconds.
What you are activating is called the mammalian dive reflex. It is one of the oldest mechanisms in your nervous system — the same reflex that slows a dolphin's heart rate underwater, the same one your body has carried since long before wellness became an industry. Cold water on your face signals your brain to shift gears: heart rate drops, the vagus nerve activates, the parasympathetic nervous system takes the wheel. The stress response quiets. Your body moves from doing to recovering.
Thirty seconds. Your sink. Tonight. That is the free tier of everything I am about to tell you. Start there, feel it, and then keep reading.
You did not slow down. You got smarter. The fitness world spent years telling women to push harder, go longer, earn their rest. In 2026 the research has finally caught up to what your body was trying to tell you all along. High-intensity training spikes cortisol, requires days of recovery, and works against the nervous system you are trying to regulate. Zone 2 cardio is now what the science recommends: sustainable, steady-state movement that builds your aerobic base, supports fat metabolism, and leaves you energized rather than depleted.
I have been running for decades. It is my anchor, my morning non-negotiable, the thing I return to without question. These past two weeks, I could not get out there. My body had no interest in the pavement. I thought it was resistance. Then I sat down to write this issue and understood: it was wisdom. My HRV was already telling me what the mainstream fitness world is finally catching up to. My nervous system was already doing the work. It did not need me to add more.
Your body is always communicating. Signal Edge exists because I believe women who have built something know how to listen. Sometimes your own signal is the loudest one in the room.
I was already ahead of this one. Pulsetto and Apollo Neuro have been in my stack for months, both working the same pathway — the vagus nerve, the long highway that connects your brain to your heart, your gut, your immune system, and your stress response. When Good Housekeeping named vagus nerve stimulation the number one wellness trend of 2026, I read it and thought: I know. What I did not know yet was Nuropod.
Let me tell you about your tragus. You have touched it a thousand times without thinking about it — that small firm nub of cartilage at the entrance of your ear. You press it when you push in earbuds. You have probably never thought about what it connects to. It connects to everything. The auricular branch of the vagus nerve runs directly through it, and the vagus nerve is the longest cranial nerve in your body, traveling from your brainstem through your heart, your lungs, your gut, your immune system. Researchers call it the wandering nerve because it touches almost everything on the way through. When you stimulate the tragus, you send a message from the front door of your ear directly into that highway.
Nuropod delivers a gentle electrical pulse to that exact spot. And here is the part nobody warns you about: it feels good. Not in an overwhelming way. In a quiet, subtle, why-is-my-whole-nervous-system-sighing-with-relief way. A pulse of pleasure with no side effects, no comedown, no guilt. I clip it on every morning and forget I am wearing science.
Here is how I think about the vagus nerve stack now. The free tier is always available: cold water splashed on your face, slow breathing with a long exhale, gargling for 30 seconds after you brush your teeth. The mid-range tier is Pulsetto and Apollo Neuro. Nuropod is the clinical tier. I am in my first weeks. I will report back in the next issue with what I find.
Start with cold water on your face tonight if you are curious. Thirty seconds. Your nervous system will notice.
Most passive income conversations start with money. This one starts with your morning. Stay with me.
Passive income is a return on something you invested earlier. The returns show up without forcing. Your nervous system works the same way. Every practice you layer into your morning is a deposit — not toward more output, but toward more flow. More energy for the things you love most. More of the feeling that pulls you toward creating rather than pushes you toward checking things off.
I have been protecting this morning ritual for over ten years. Sixty minutes before the world needs anything from me. The return on this investment is not more capacity. It is more of yourself, doing more of what you were made to do.
Start small. Cold water on your face tonight. One slow exhale before you open your phone in the morning. These are the first deposits. The flow compounds.
You spent years building something that lasts. At some point along the way, most of us quietly accepted that the body was a different category — something to manage rather than invest in. The science of 2026 has a different opinion, and it aligns exactly with everything you already know about building for the long game.
Muscle mass is the tissue most associated with metabolic health, insulin sensitivity, bone density, and the ability to move through your life on your own terms at every age. The research is clear: women who prioritize resistance training in their 40s and 50s are making deposits into a body that will generate returns for decades. This is not about aesthetics. It is about staying in the game, on your terms, for as long as you choose to play.
You do not need a gym membership or a complicated program to start. I added a 20-pound medicine ball to my morning routine and the simplicity of it surprised me. Squats, slams, carries, presses: all of it with one piece of equipment that cost $49. The barrier is lower than you think, and the compounding effect is the same as everything else we talk about here. Start now. Build the asset. Collect the return.
We have passed 25 founding members. The founding chapter is closed.
Signal Edge continues as a newsletter, free for founding members, always. What comes next is still taking shape. I am grateful you are here.
Stay curious. Stay in charge.
Holly
Curation in every breath, beat and blink.
Everything in Signal Edge reflects my own research, curiosity, and lived experience. I am not a licensed financial planner, certified tax advisor, registered investment advisor, or medical professional. Nothing here constitutes financial, investment, tax, legal, or medical advice. It is personal opinion, shared openly and honestly from one thinking person to another. Please consult qualified professionals before making decisions about your money, health, or property.
© Holly Culbreth / Signal Edge. All rights reserved.