Science Corner 60 | Confidently Wrong: 10 Supplement Lessons From My 20s

I am almost 40. And I have spent most of the last 2 decades thinking seriously about supplements, both personally and professionally. And when I look back at how I approached them in my 20s, two words come to mind: confidently wrong.
I wasn't alone. Many people in their 20s who care about their health fall into the same traps.
They buy what's marketed loudest.
They expect results they can feel.
They assume more is better. I did all of it.
Here are 10 things I wish I had known sooner.
Most people don't fail at supplements because they choose the wrong ones. They fail because they never learned how supplements actually work.
1. Bioavailability is everything
The supplement facts panel tells you how much of a nutrient is in a serving. It does not tell you how much your body actually absorbs. That gap is called bioavailability, and it varies enormously depending on the form of the nutrient.
Magnesium oxide is cheap and common. It also has lower absorption rates. Magnesium glycinate and magnesium malate absorb considerably better. The same pattern holds across dozens of nutrients. Vitamin D3 vs D2. Methylcobalamin vs. cyanocobalamin. Ferrous bisglycinate vs. ferrous sulfate.
Younger me bought whatever was cheapest. Older me reads the form first.
2. Timing changes the outcome

Some supplements work better taken with food. Some work better taken without it. Some compete for absorption if you stack them wrong. And some, like caffeine, have timing windows that matter more than most people realize.
I spent years taking my vitamin D at night out of convenience. Fat-soluble vitamins absorb better with your largest meal, which for many people is not a small glass of water before bed. I also learned the hard way that my personal caffeine cutoff is 2 p.m. Push past it and my sleep quality tanks, even if I feel fine in the evening. The research on caffeine's half-life backs this up. It takes 3 to 7 hours for half of a dose to clear your system.
Timing is not obsessive. It is just not leaving free gains on the table.
3. Most preworkouts are clinically underdosed
This one stings a little, because I studied these and spent real money on preworkouts in my 20s thinking I was doing something smart.
Here is the problem: the doses that produce measurable results in clinical trials are often significantly higher than what ends up in a single serving of a commercial product. Beta-alanine requires around 4 to 6 grams per day to saturate muscle carnosine levels (take it every day). Many preworkouts include less than 2 grams and call it a day. Citrulline is most effective at 6 to 8 grams. Plenty of labels show 3.
The tingling some people can feel from beta-alanine is real. The effect at that dose, less so. Check the label against the research before you buy.
4. Some nutrients block each other
Calcium and iron compete for the same absorption pathways. Take them together and you may absorb considerably less of both. Zinc and copper have a similar relationship. High-dose zinc supplementation, taken long term, can deplete copper levels enough to cause problems.
This is not bioavailability exactly. It is nutrient competition, and it is something most people never think about until a clinician flags a deficiency that shouldn't exist given their supplement stack.
Solutions are usually simple: separate them by a few hours. But you have to know if the interaction exists first.
5. You won't "feel" most supplements working
This was probably the hardest lesson for 25-year-old me. I expected supplements to feel like something. If I didn't notice a difference in a week, I assumed they weren't working.
That is not how most supplements operate. Vitamin D builds slowly in your tissue. Omega-3s shift your cell membrane composition over months. Magnesium quietly supports hundreds of enzymatic reactions without announcing itself. The absence of a noticeable effect is not evidence of no effect.
I learned I was running suboptimal vitamin D levels for years without any symptoms I could point to. My numbers told the story. My body didn't.
6. Third-party testing is not a bonus feature

The supplement industry in the U.S. operates under a different regulatory framework than pharmaceuticals. Manufacturers are responsible for ensuring their own products are safe and accurately labeled before they go to market. Independent verification is not required.
That means what's on the label isn't always what's in the bottle. Third-party certifications like TESTED by SuppCo, NSF Certified for Sport, Informed Sport, and USP exist specifically to close this gap. They test for label accuracy, contaminants, and in the case of NSF and Informed Sport, substances banned in athletic competition.
This is not a niche concern for professional athletes. It is a basic quality check that every supplement buyer deserves.
7. The placebo effect is real
Here is something that took me longer than it should have to appreciate: the placebo effect is a real physiological phenomenon. It is not just imagining results. In some contexts, expecting a supplement to work activates measurable biological responses.
This cuts both ways. It means some of what you "feel" from a new supplement may be expectation, not biochemistry. But it also means that a supplement providing genuine psychological benefit, even partly through expectation, is still providing benefit.
I used to think the placebo effect invalidated a supplement. Now I think it complicates the story in a more interesting way. Subjective experience matters. It just can't be the only evidence you rely on.
8. More is not always more
The dose-response curve for most nutrients is not a straight line. It curves. At low intake, more is better. At adequate intake, more does very little. At high intake, some nutrients become actively harmful.
Vitamin A is fat-soluble and can accumulate in the liver. Chronic overconsumption is toxic. Selenium has a remarkably narrow therapeutic window. Even vitamin D, which many people are deficient in, can cause potential problems at sustained very high doses.
The impulse to optimize by adding more is understandable. But for many nutrients, the goal is sufficiency, not maximization.
9. Some supplements are daily habits. Others are tools.
Creatine is a good example of the first category. Its benefits, particularly for muscle performance and cognitive function, accumulate in muscle tissue over time. Missing a day matters less than maintaining consistent daily intake. It is a long-game supplement.
Melatonin is a good example of the second. It is not a sleep supplement you take every night indefinitely. It is a circadian signal, most useful for travel, schedule shifts, or specific short-term sleep disruption. Daily use at typical commercial doses is likely more than most people need.
Electrolytes taught me something slightly different. I started taking them because I thought I needed them. Turns out my diet probably covered the bases. But I still take them sometimes because they taste good and give me a delightful option in the afternoon that isn’t coffee. That is okay too. Not everything has to be medicinal to be worth doing.
10. The long game is the only game

Many people quit supplements too soon. They take something for two or three weeks, don't notice anything dramatic, and move on. But many of the most evidence-backed supplements produce their benefits over months, not days.
Omega-3 fatty acids take 8 to 12 weeks to meaningfully shift red blood cell membrane composition. Collagen peptides, in the studies showing joint and skin benefit, are typically run for 8 to 12 weeks or longer. Even creatine, which saturates muscle stores relatively quickly, continues to show compounding performance benefits over longer supplementation periods.
The supplement industry is not great at communicating this. Short trial periods and monthly subscription models don't exactly encourage patience. But if you quit after week two, you're not testing whether something works. You're just wasting money.
At the end of the day, supplements are tools. Like any tool, they work better when you know how to use them. Most of the mistakes I made in my 20s came down to skipping that step. I'm not sure I would have listened if someone had told me. But I'm glad I figured it out before another decade went by.
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Personal note from Jordan
Believe it or not, I actually started taking testosterone boosters when I was around 23. I genuinely believed the marketing. I wanted to get bigger faster, and here was a product that promised exactly that. I have no idea how much money I spent. I do know that the primary active ingredients in most of those products were either ineffective at the doses used or hadn't been studied in healthy young men with normal testosterone levels to begin with.
What I didn't know then was that I should have been asking basic questions. What is the mechanism? What does the clinical evidence actually show? What form, what dose, for how long? Those are not complicated questions. Nobody just taught me to ask them.
That's most of what this list is. Not advanced biochemistry. Just the questions I wish someone had handed me at 23 instead of a shaker bottle and a loyalty discount.
If you're earlier in your supplement journey than I am, I genuinely hope this saves you some money and some frustration. And if you've been at this a while and you're nodding along, you already know the best thing you can do is share it with someone who's just getting started. Thanks for being here.