
Most patients don't see a medication list the way I see it.
They see a list of tablets they take every morning. Practical information. What to take, when to take it, what it's for.
When I sit down to do a medication review as a pharmacist, I see something different. I see a timeline. A record of decisions that weren't made, warnings that weren't heeded, a body that tried to communicate something for years before anyone paid attention.
After doing thousands of these reviews, in NHS hospitals, in ICU wards, in GP clinics, I started seeing the same story told over and over again.
The timeline I kept reading
A composite. One I've read hundreds of times.
Each prescription made sense at the time. Each one was the right call within the guidelines. The GP wasn't wrong. The system wasn't broken in the way people usually mean when they say that.
But zoom out and you're not looking at five separate health problems. You're looking at one problem that was never addressed, slowly expressing itself in different ways across a decade.
The window that keeps appearing
What struck me most, reviewing hundreds of these timelines, was the window.
Somewhere around 2013 or 2014 in the example above, four years before the first prescription, there was a point where none of those medications existed. The blood sugar was borderline but not diagnosable. The blood pressure was creeping but not treatable. The weight was going on around the middle but not dramatically so.
Nothing bad enough to treat. Nothing specific enough to flag as urgent.
But the trajectory was already there. Anyone looking carefully could see where it was heading.
That window, that stretch of time between "something is building" and "something is now bad enough to medicate", is where I work now.
A medication list is a biography of an unaddressed life. I don't mean that critically. The system wasn't designed to intervene at the window stage. It was designed to treat what's already broken. That's not a failure of medicine. It's a gap that most people don't know exists.
What this means for founders specifically
The founders I work with are, almost universally, sitting somewhere in that window right now.
They don't feel terrible. They just don't feel like themselves. A bit tired, a bit heavier than they'd like, not quite as sharp as they used to be. The afternoon energy crash they've accepted as normal. The belly they've attributed to age. The sleep that's fine, technically, but leaves them unrefreshed.
Their bloods are often "fine", or close enough that their GP didn't flag anything concerning.
But fine and optimal are not the same thing. And the HbA1c range that most labs report as normal includes territory that represents years of metabolic dysfunction building quietly.
When I look at a founder's blood results with the clinical background I have from a decade in metabolic health, I'm often seeing a picture that should be taken seriously, even when it's technically within range.
The question worth asking yourself
Here's the honest question: if you plotted your health trajectory over the last five years (weight, energy, sleep quality, blood sugar trends, waist measurement), is the line going in the right direction?
Most founders, if they're honest, will say no. Not dramatically. But the trend is clear.
Business performance has improved over those five years. Health has quietly declined.
That's not age. That's not inevitable. That's a window. And unlike the business problems you solve every week, this one doesn't get easier to address the longer you wait.
The window I'm describing, where the trajectory can genuinely be reversed without medication, is available to most founders reading this right now. It's not available indefinitely.
I'm not trying to alarm anyone. I'm trying to give you the same honest picture I'd want someone to have given me at 42 before it became a harder conversation at 55.
The best time to act on this is before the list starts
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