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Ever wondered what separates elite OCR athletes from weekend warriors? It's not just about doing more burpees or running faster—it's about understanding the science and purpose behind every workout.In this revealing episode, Morgan, Chris, and Darren pull back the curtain on their training evolution, from their early days of random woodland workouts to their current structured approaches. The conversation takes fascinating turns as they debate the differences between tempo and threshold running, share their week-by-week training schedules, and discover that what feels challenging isn't always what drives improvement."The workouts I thought were changing me versus the workouts that actually changed me," Morgan reflects, highlighting how his perception of effective training shifted dramatically over time. Meanwhile, Chris advocates for simplicity with his "long run, fast run, and mixed run" approach, while Darren reveals how tempo runs—maintaining "uncomfortably comfortable" pace—transformed his racing.Whether you're training for your first Spartan Sprint or gunning for OCR World Championships, this episode offers practical insights into training structure, workout selection, and most importantly, understanding the "why" behind each session. The hosts' candid admissions about confusion, overtraining, and misunderstood terminology make this an accessible, relatable deep-dive into OCR training philosophy.By the end, you'll understand why Morgan believes "if you know the why behind your workouts, you should be in a very good place"—and how finding purpose in training creates both accountability and results in obstacle course racing.Support the show
We have done OCR eulogy episodes in the past but never a eulogy episode on OCR podcasts! Mike used his first hand experience, Podchaser, and his own podcast app to find as many podcasts as he could find whether dead or alive. He compiled the show names, descriptions, hosts, how many episodes released, date range of the show, and personal thoughts and experiences where applicable! There are well over 50 OCR podcasts discussed but apologies if we missed some. We are a 2 person team and this took a pretty decent amount of time to put together. See the shows mentioned in the time stamps below! Start – 3:43 – Intro 3:43 – 10:24 – Quick News 10:24 – 12:24 – Content Preface 12:24 – 42:32 - Dead Podcasts (All You've Got, Burpee Nation, My Journey to World's Toughest Mudder, No Excuses: The Official Tough Mudder Podcast, Obstacle Dominator, OCR Coven, Overcome and Run, Strength and Speed: Obstacle Course Racing Lessons From Other Sports, Nitty Gritty Training, Multi-Sport Media, BROCR SUPERCAST!, OCR Unedited, Obstacle Order, MudTap: OCR's Dirty Little Secret, CrossCast: Der OCR Podcast, Preparation OCR, Level Up in OCR, POD1UM: Der OCR Podcast, OCR Radio, The OCR Review, OCR News Weekly, Dirt in Your Skirt, OCR Disrupt Podcast, Obstacle Course Racing, The Functional Times, SISU Radio, Running and Obstacle Race Training, Obstacle Racers New Zealand, NE Spahten Show, Epic Race Gear, Middle of the Pack, Mud and Glory Podcast, The Natural Running Network, and Quarantine Cafe) 42:32 – 48:11 - Almost Dead Podcasts (The OCR Report, The OCRWC Podcast, Race Brain, and World's Toughest Podcast) 48:11 – 1:04:11 - Podcasts Still With Us (Accountability Corner, Fran and Carlo Get OCR Adjacent, I Am A Spartan!: OCR Podcast, Obstacle Racing Media Podcast, Obstacle Running Adventures, OCR Talk, OFX Podcast, The Running Public, The OCR Underground Show, Talking Dirty: An OCR Podcast, The Hard Way with Joe De Sena, Endurance Icons, BeastNet, and UKOCR) 1:04:11 - 1:06:17 - More Dead Podcasts: Women of OCR, The OCR Review, Try Not To Die OCR, Mud Brothers, OCR PODCAST. By CrossWork Entrenadores, Dutch OCR Podcast, Zavoty OCR, Rise and Grind OCR and Endurance, and Highly Functional Runners and Obstacle Course Racers) 1:06:17 – End – Outro Next weekend we are hopefully getting to that interview with the author that we have been talking about for the past few months or an interview with a guest that Mike has a sudden interest in! ____ News Stories: John Kelly Takes on Appalachian Trail Hyrox Elite Wall Ball Targets Not Enough Clydesdales or Athenas Registered for WTM WTM 2025 Patches Meg Jacoby Not Competing in Hyrox World Championship Spartan Monterey Super Podiums Hildervat Podiums Savage Charlotte Podiums Spartan Colorado Springs Ultra and Beast Podiums New York Secret Link Baby Name Secret Link Squat Survival Secret Link Voice Actor Secret Link Solo Christmas Secret Link ____ Related Episodes: 50. Matt B Davis talks OCR, Atlanta, and More! 59. Margaret Schlachter talks Early Elite OCR, Mud Run Guide, and Dirt in Your Skirt! 87. OCR Events Eulogy: Remembering Battlefrog, Superhero Scramble, Spartan Cruise and Many More! 176. OCR Underground's Live Virtual OCR with Mike Deibler! 226. Matt B Davis on Unplugging, Mental Health, The Meaning of Life, and More! 377. OCR Events Eulogy: Remembering Warrior Dash, Rugged Maniac, Terrain Race, and Bonefrog! 420. Accountability Corner with Darren Martin, Morgan Maxwell, and Chris Shipley! ____ The OCR Report Patreon Supporters: Jason Dupree, Kim DeVoss, Samantha Thompson, Matt Puntin, Brad Kiehl, Charlotte Engelman, Erin Grindstaff, Hank Stefano, Arlene Stefano, Laura Ritter, Steven Ritter, Sofia Harnedy, Kenny West, Cheryl Miller, Jessica Johnson, Scott "The Fayne" Knowles, Nick Ryker, Christopher Hoover, Kevin Gregory Jr., Evan Eirich, Ashley Reis, Brent George, Justin Manning, Wendell Lagosh, Logan Nagle, Angela Bowers, Asa Coddington, Thomas Petersen, Seth Rinderknecht, Bonnie Wilson, Steve Bacon from The New England OCR Expo, and Robert Landman. Sponsored Athletes: Javier Escobar, Kelly Sullivan, Ryan Brizzolara, Joshua Reid, and Kevin Gregory! Support us on Patreon for exclusive content and access to our Facebook group Check out our Threadless Shop Use coupon code "adventure" for 15% off MudGear products Use coupon code "ocrreport20" for 20% off Caterpy products Like us on Facebook: Obstacle Running Adventures Follow our podcast on Instagram: @ObstacleRunningAdventures Write us an email: obstaclerunningadventures@gmail.com Subscribe on Youtube: Obstacle Running Adventures Intro music - "Streaker" by: Straight Up Outro music - "Iron Paw" by: Dubbest
Ich bin beim Spartan Race in Zandvoort gestartet: 14 km bis zum 80km/h Gegenwind, 25 Hindernisse und ehrlicherweise nicht mein bestes Rennen. In dieser Folge nehme ich dich mit hinter die Kulissen und zeige dir am Beispiel meines Rennens:
Morgan, Chris and Darren discuss how mental relaxation has unexpectedly led to improved race performances in their OCR careers. They explore why being less focused on results and more present in the training process can be transformative for athletes.• Relaxed racing mindset produces better results than forcing performance• Mo's shift from pressure-filled racing to enjoying training has improved her competitive outcomes• Mental calmness during races allows for better tactical decisions and obstacle execution• UK racers tend to start races too aggressively compared to more strategically measured European competitors• World Championships course in Sweden alternates between technical woodland and flat pathways• Appropriate shoe selection depends on terrain and weather conditions - versatile trail shoes recommended• Training philosophy evolution: master obstacles first, focus on running fitness, then combine both elements• Experimenting with different sports and movement patterns may prevent injuries and enhance OCR performanceThis is our classic unstructured format where we dive deep into OCR topics without a set agenda - exactly what started the Accountability Corner journey!Support the show
Dave Peters returns to discuss the upcoming Rumble Fitness 3K race on May 25th, the third event in the 2025 3K OCR series featuring 30 obstacles, 300 feet of elevation, and a unique combination of technical and strength challenges.• The race will have three distinct zones: the barn, proving grounds, and field• Course includes heavy strength elements including a difficult drag and lorry tire carry• Technical obstacles feature combination rigs with moving attachments and elevation changes• The deceptive hill is more challenging than it appears with rutted, uneven terrain• Competitors should train hill repeats combined with body weight exercises for preparation• Race occurs 5 weeks before European Championships making it perfect preparation• Points system allows racers to count their best 4 scores from the 6-race series• Course will be slower than previous 3K races with winning times around 21-22 minutes• Spectators can view most of the course from central viewing areas• Registration closes two days before the event with tickets priced at £40Visit the Rumble Fitness Instagram page or British Obstacle Sports website for links to register.Support the show
When a devastating knee injury threatened to end Thibaut Debuchet's decade-long reign as one of obstacle course racing's elite competitors, many wondered if we'd ever see the Belgian champion on course again. His triumphant return not only defied medical expectations but revealed the extraordinary mental fortitude that's made him a fixture on podiums across the globe.From the moment Thibaut discovered OCR in 2013, his natural strength and athleticism made him a formidable competitor. A remarkable 11th place finish at his first OCR World Championship in Cincinnati announced his arrival, but it was his consistency over the years that cemented his legacy. Through this conversation, he provides a fascinating window into how the sport has transformed – from the technically demanding courses of Denmark and Poland that rewarded raw strength, to today's more running-focused formats that require different training approaches.What truly sets Thibaut apart is his relentless adaptability. While maintaining a full-time job for much of his career, he managed to train 100+ kilometers weekly, constantly adjusting his approach as the sport evolved. "Every year I was cutting down training for obstacles and running more and more," he explains, noting how his annual mileage increased by 1,000 kilometers year after year to keep pace with the sport's direction. This willingness to evolve, combined with his natural obstacle proficiency and tactical race awareness, explains his remarkable podium consistency.The conversation takes a particularly inspiring turn when discussing his rehabilitation journey. After surgery that left him unable to run for three months, Thibaut dedicated 20-25 hours weekly to recovery work, tackling exercises he'd previously neglected. The result? He's returned with improved physiological markers and renewed perspective. "I have a better VO2 max than in 2020. My lactate threshold is higher than before," he shares, demonstrating that setbacks can become opportunities when approached with determination.Whether you're an elite athlete, weekend warrior, or someone contemplating your first OCR, Thibaut's journey offers valuable lessons about balancing passion with purpose, addressing weaknesses rather than just enhancing strengths, and above all, as he emphasizes repeatedly – keeping the fun alive. Follow his continuing comeback story on Instagram @tibo_ocr and watch for his appearances at upcoming international events!Support the show
Nicholas Klingensmith says that he grew up a punk and not so nice kid. As he will describe, he was quite self centered, but it was all a façade. He will tell his story of finally realizing that he needed to change both his thinking and his concept of himself. Nick is a type one diabetic. He also is a 4-time cancer survivor and he has a number of herniated disks. He also is a recovering alcoholic. Nick finally realized he had to change after being thrown out of a Las Vegas hotel the night before he was to deliver sales speech. Nick was ejected because he was in, as he says, a “drunken haze”. Today Nick is a successful author, a public speaker and a successful obstacle course racer and so much more. He also is a survivor of the October hurricane that struck near his home in Tampa Bay Florida. We talk about all of this during this episode. Nicholas talks about resilience, controlling fear and even why he and his wife made the conscious decision not to evacuate their home as the hurricane approached. Nick offers many insights about how we all can learn to control fear and not only survive obstacles that are put in our way, but he will talk about how we can truly overcome them. As he will tell us, it is all about choice and making informed decisions. This episode to me is especially poignant because so many of the things we discuss are illustrations of what is going on all around us. I think Nick's experiences and the stories he tells about them are the kinds of things to which we all can relate. I hope you like Nick's discussion and that you will let me know your thoughts. About the Guest: After being thrown out of a Las Vegas hotel in a drunken haze, jeopardizing his career and relationships, Nick Klingensmith had to make a change. A 4-time cancer survivor, type-1 diabetic, recovering alcoholic with herniated discs, nerve damage and sleep apnea, he defies it all when he finds Obstacle Course Racing. Refusing to accept his limitations, he's completed over 100 Spartan Races, 6 Major Marathons, several Ultras and scores of other obstacle and endurance events. As someone who has walked the path of a sales professional, Nick is an expert in propelling other achievement-driven professionals and leaders to overcome fear and rejection and push past self-limiting doubts, by inspiring them to take purposeful action towards their goals. Nick is a raw and passionate storyteller who holds nothing back when revealing who he used to be and the person he is now. A true testament to the power of resilience, with an unwavering belief in his purpose to overcome obstacles and inspire others to do the same, Nick delivers powerful and transformative speeches, drawing from personal experiences to illustrate the extraordinary potential of pushing through adversity. 1) The power of perseverance: Pursuing personal growth and overcoming obstacles for success 2) Pursuing Something Greater: Taking Risks, pushing boundaries and exploring your unlimited potential 3) Living Inspired: Embracing Purpose, overcoming adversity, and finding belonging Ways to connect with Nick: Instagram: @stridemotivation https://www.instagram.com/stridemotivation/ TikTok: @stridemotivation https://www.tiktok.com/@stridemotivation?lang=en Twitter: @stridemotivatio https://twitter.com/stridemotivatio YouTube: @stridemotivation https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOiV2sNB3g4meufvBg3a9sA Threads: @stridemotivation LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nklingensmith/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100069207242260 www.stridemotivation.com Email: nick@stridemotivation.com About the Host: Michael Hingson is a New York Times best-selling author, international lecturer, and Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe. Michael, blind since birth, survived the 9/11 attacks with the help of his guide dog Roselle. This story is the subject of his best-selling book, Thunder Dog. Michael gives over 100 presentations around the world each year speaking to influential groups such as Exxon Mobile, AT&T, Federal Express, Scripps College, Rutgers University, Children's Hospital, and the American Red Cross just to name a few. He is Ambassador for the National Braille Literacy Campaign for the National Federation of the Blind and also serves as Ambassador for the American Humane Association's 2012 Hero Dog Awards. https://michaelhingson.com https://www.facebook.com/michael.hingson.author.speaker/ https://twitter.com/mhingson https://www.youtube.com/user/mhingson https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelhingson/ accessiBe Links https://accessibe.com/ https://www.youtube.com/c/accessiBe https://www.linkedin.com/company/accessibe/mycompany/ https://www.facebook.com/accessibe/ Thanks for listening! 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Transcription Notes: Michael Hingson ** 00:00 Access Cast and accessiBe Initiative presents Unstoppable Mindset. The podcast where inclusion, diversity and the unexpected meet. Hi, I'm Michael Hingson, Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe and the author of the number one New York Times bestselling book, Thunder dog, the story of a blind man, his guide dog and the triumph of trust. Thanks for joining me on my podcast as we explore our own blinding fears of inclusion unacceptance and our resistance to change. We will discover the idea that no matter the situation, or the people we encounter, our own fears, and prejudices often are our strongest barriers to moving forward. The unstoppable mindset podcast is sponsored by accessiBe, that's a c c e s s i capital B e. Visit www.accessibe.com to learn how you can make your website accessible for persons with disabilities. And to help make the internet fully inclusive by the year 2025. Glad you dropped by we're happy to meet you and to have you here with us. Michael Hingson ** 01:21 Well, hi everyone, and welcome to another episode of unstoppable mindset, where inclusion, diversity and the unexpected meet unexpected. Boy. It's been a crazy time in the world in general, and for our guest, Nick Klingensmith, it's really been kind of unexpected. Nick lives down in the Tampa St Pete area, and we as he knows, and I know, just went through a week ago hurricanes down there, which tells you about when we're recording this. He lost power for a while, but Nick is a pretty resilient guy, and he's going to going to talk about some of that. He's a keynote speaker. He's an author. Does a lot of different kinds of things. He is a coach, conducts master classes, and some things happen along the way that caused him to get to be where he is today. So we're not going to give any of that away. I want Nick and and while I'm Nick to talk about it and you to hear it, so we'll leave it at that. Nick, thanks for being here, and welcome to unstoppable mindset. We're glad you're here. Nick Klingenmith ** 02:20 Michael, thank you so much for having me. I'm I'm really excited to be here today, Michael Hingson ** 02:24 and I'm glad I was out in Southern California. Actually, that's not totally true last week or when the hurricane hit. I was in Kansas City and so but I one of the people who spoke when I was there was an economist who lived down in Florida, and I don't know exactly where she lived, but she went out as soon as her talk was over to get back to Florida, because she felt that her home was right in the middle of everything. So gosh, what do you do? Nick Klingenmith ** 02:53 I'll tell you. Man, with the hurricanes, the most dangerous thing you can do is the reactive decisions before the hurricane. And part of what I'm talking about is being right where we are, right just north of St Petersburg, just north of where ground zero was supposed to be, right up until the like the late hour. You know, there's a lot of factors you have to consider when you like what want to evacuate or not. You know, we have a senior dog. We can't we can only drive so far with him. We have a reactive dog. There's only so many places we can take him, and if you didn't leave early, you risk running out of gas on the side of the highway. So there comes a point where, you know, we decided it our house was as secure as a home can be, even for a direct hit, we're just going to ride it out. We buttoned down. We were as safe as we could be. But, you know, with people telling you, like, run, run, run, right? Like, well, I have a friend who evacuated to Sarasota, where the direct hit actually ended up being, you know, I mean, where was I going to go to? To Orlando. It was directly in the path of the storm. Where was I gonna go? To the mountains? Because clearly, that's not so safe after all, the 72 hours leading up to a hurricane where just everybody panics and, you know, I think honestly, and this is what we'll unpack here, what I've learned from what not just not what I've been through, because what I've been through didn't teach me anything. It was what I had to what I had to do to put it all in perspective, and didn't understand it, but all those lessons in resilience give you the ability to pause and make better decisions in the face of adversity well, Michael Hingson ** 04:32 and that is absolutely true. You know, should you have evacuated well? You know, as you said, there are a lot of ways to go. And the question is, where could you really go? You'd have to leave really early to make sure you could evacuate far enough away. But then, as you said, you have a dog that that can't travel this far, and that becomes an issue. Just, you know, Nick Klingenmith ** 04:56 I'm not Florida. Man, all right, right. I am. Out three and a half miles from the shore. Yeah, I am just beyond, like, the line of demarcation, but if I was on the other side of the bridge, there's no way I would have stayed. Yeah, you Michael Hingson ** 05:12 know, well, you know, you can only do what you can do and decide what you can decide. But the real issue, as you point out, is being able to pause and analyze it. And one of the things that I love to tell people is I love information. For me, when September 11 happened, there were a couple of times I asked people like an FBI agent, what's going on, and they wouldn't tell me. And I understand why, intellectually, they wouldn't because they didn't want to cause panic. As we were coming out of the stairwell, none of us knew what happened. The hundreds of people on the stairs didn't know. Of course, people always say, well, you're blind. You didn't know. Well, that has nothing to do with it. The plane hit on the other side of the building, 18 floors above us, and you know, the reality is, we don't see through concrete, steel and rebar. So the bottom line is, none of us knew, and when I asked, he said, Well, just no time to tell you, but I'll take you where you need to go, me and other people who are with us. I wish he had told me, it would have changed some decisions I made, but I also understand why he didn't. He didn't know me. He didn't know whether I panic or go crazy or whatever, and and so he did what he did. And actually, I shouldn't say that I would change what I did and the direction that we went I might have. But the bottom line is, it's all about being able to pause and analyze, and you have to have the information to do it. And you clearly were in a position to have as much information as you could have and make the decision that you made. Nick Klingenmith ** 06:48 You know, when you hear seals describe like certain engagements and these split seconds that go by, and just the decision making process and the the way that, you know, time slows down for that. I mean, that's what they train for. That's why they train through adversity, and that's, that's how I look at more adversity now. And it's not that I welcome it. Don't get me wrong, you know? I mean, who really wants bad things or uncomfortable things? You don't want them. But I like to say this because somebody had asked me once that, if I wasn't a diabetic, would I be a better athlete? And I said, No, if I wasn't a diabetic, I wouldn't be an athlete at all. I wouldn't have become one so. Well, why is that I have these tools? I've accepted that life is always going to keep coming, so I just don't need to panic anymore. I know I have the tools and ability to slow down and make that decision making tree to get through it. Michael Hingson ** 07:46 Yeah, okay, and that makes sense, but it is this, we, what if everything in the world anyway, too many people, what if everything, well, what if you weren't a diabetic, would you have done? You know, we, we, we always have to see those questions coming at us. And it's unfortunate that all too often we What if so much that we create a lot of fear that we don't need to create, yeah, which you know, makes sense. Tell us a little about if you would. I love to start out this way, the early Nick growing up and all that, and kind of what, what started you to where you're going and where you are, Nick Klingenmith ** 08:26 man, I was a little shit. There you go. Michael Hingson ** 08:29 That's Thanks for being on the podcast. Nick, we just summarized. No, no, go ahead. I Nick Klingenmith ** 08:35 was such a punk, not a bad not like a I didn't like to get in trouble, but I, I was a little punk, you know, from the time I was a little kid. And I think I realize now, you know, part of, part of what I've uncovered in my history here is that my my father left me, left my mom, not me at a very young age. I grew up on an island, all right, it wasn't an after school special. He moved down the road, but the problem was that my mom wasn't she was still active with drugs, and she simply just wasn't capable of actually like caring for me. And so I grew up not necessarily looking for other people's validation so much as trying to prove that I didn't need it. So, I mean, I had a, I like, I was, I had a side hustle when I was in the second grade, like, I was hustling kids playing cards out of the playground, like, I just kind of like to buck the rules. I liked, I liked the bad guy in the movies. You know, it was, that's who I related to. But that, that sort of grittiness, actually turned into something after a while, because as I continue to look at myself as more independent and having to do it on my own, I also started working at a young age. I went to a boarding school for high school because I wanted a better education. Something else. I sought out myself, financial aid. I sought out myself. I went to college back. At the University of Massachusetts, and I also paid for that. Paid my own way through summer jobs and well, the last 20 years. So that was all working for me as something for a very long time, I was active in life. I like to play sports. I played competitive beach volleyball for 20 years. I I like to I liked to socialize. I often find myself in relationships, and there just came a point, though, where that sort of me against a world attitude changed. It was something that was giving me fuel and armor for a long time, right when I found out is that it was actually more like the rally cry of the victim mindset that I had been developing. Michael Hingson ** 10:45 So what happened that brought that realization and that change? Nick Klingenmith ** 10:51 I needed to start having real things happen to me, such as the four times I've been diagnosed with cancer. I'm a type one diabetic. I just celebrated 10 years of recovery from alcoholism. I have seven herniated discs from two different rollover fatality car accidents, nerve damage in several areas, sleep apnea. I almost died from meningitis. All those things had happened, and all those things had only contributed, though, to the victim mindset. It wasn't until I became an obstacle course racer, until, actually, after my boss walks in my office and challenges me to do a Spartan Race. And this was at a time where I was on top of the world. At that point, I was two years sober. I was a VP of sales. I was doing really well in my career. I was in a new relationship with an amazing woman that's now my wife. And I had just decisively beaten cancer for the fourth time, and I was I was kind of stuck, and so when he challenged me to do this obstacle course race with him. I knew I needed a change, and I didn't know what it was, so I said yes to this event. And it was through that process that I began to defy everything that I had previously believed about myself. I had created such limiting beliefs. I had created this narrative again, me against the world. I'm the victim poor me, right? I was convinced that I couldn't run because of my diabetes. I couldn't adventure because of my sleep apnea. I'd always be a piece of crap because of my addiction. When I went out there and I did my first obstacle course race. So I'm out there in the woods, crawling under barbed wire, carrying heavy objects, climbing up ropes, swinging from things, just like a little kid out there in the world with no fear and no doubt. And it wasn't me against the world, it was me in the world. And I felt just liberated. And I realized that everything I had convinced myself before of that had been a lie, and I didn't know yet what I had just, you know, told you about the victim mindset. It was just that point, I realized I was capable. I had this blank slate in front of me, and so for the next six, seven months, I got into this world of endurance sports and obstacle course racing. And I was improving through better nutrition, better exercise, yoga, meditation. I was improving through mind, body and spirit in all aspects of my life. And that's when I was in a second car accident, and that's where I got several more of my herniated discs, and that's where I got nerve damage. And the same day that happened, my cat of 12 years died, and 10 days after that, the lady who hit me died. And even though all I was doing was sitting at a red light when that happened, I felt responsible, and I was home couple weeks later, just heartbroken and devastated. You know, the last six, seven months have been like a dream to me. I felt like I was becoming this better person in all aspects, and now I felt like it was being all taken away from me, and you want to give up. And I'm sure I'm not the only person who's ever felt that way. I just didn't know what that meant. So I kept going to work. So I keep taking showers, I keep walking the dog, I keep meeting my responsibilities. And so I decided to put another race on the calendar, and when I was trying to train. I just I wasn't in it, and I was listening to this, like motivational compilation on YouTube, this guy's going back and forth about, are you a survivor? You are or victim? Are you a victim or survivor? And that's when I realized that even though I had already been progressing and I had just like found this new found lifestyle that I was still playing the victim. I was still saying, Woe is me, why me? Why me? And I? When I recognized it, that's when I realized that it's also a choice. You may not have chosen to be a victim, but you do choose to remain one, and I decided that that point that I will not be defined by my adversity, but rather. They're my triumph over it, and so it's been a decision. I have to only what. There's only one way I can tell that story, and it's a long version. Michael Hingson ** 15:07 No, that's fine. You know, one of the things that that I realized during September 11, and it was partly because as tower two was falling and I was falling and I was running away from it, one of the things I said to myself was, God, I can't believe that you got us out of a building just to have it fall on us. And I'm a guy who has a lot of faith and so on, and I don't tend to panic. But I said that, and then immediately I heard in my head of voice as clearly as you hear me now, that said, don't worry about what you can't control. Focus on running with Roselle, who is my guide dog, and the rest will take care of itself. And I've adopted that mindset, which is really what you're saying. Focus on what you can control. There are things that happen to us that we didn't and wouldn't have any control over them happening. I've been well, I'm still yet to be convinced that we truly could have predicted September 11 as a country and stopped it. I don't think that we had the information, which says something about what a team dedicated to trying to create so much chaos and destruction was able to do because they functioned as a team. But the bottom line is that they did what they did. I don't think we could have stopped it, but what I do have control over is how I deal with what happened. I couldn't control what happened, but I can deal with what happened, and I think that's the important part of it, you know, I think Nick Klingenmith ** 16:42 part of what you just it's not that you can do with it. I think the difference is you recognize it as yours to deal with. That's the first step. You know, too often we we refuse to recognize that we have an option, just because we don't like the options and dealing with it. We have to accept whatever happened happened. I have to accept that I'm a diabetic. I said this in a speech the other night. I said, like it's I'm not to blame that I'm I'm a diabetic, but when I take responsibility for being diabetic, I can be an ultra endurance athlete. Gotta accept our starting line, whatever, whatever that is. And, you know, there's a friend of mine, she's also a diabetic. She has a kind of a special something. I don't really understand diabetes thing, but, you know, she she, she struggles because she tries to control it, instead of just manage it, or instead of live with it. You know, they're basically kind of, now I'm going to mess this one up, but she doesn't focus on what she can control. She's so focused on what she can't. Mm, hmm. And that's what keeps Michael Hingson ** 17:57 her stuck, yeah, and it happens so often, which is one of the things I talk about in my new book that we published in August of 2024 the book called Live like a guide dog, is that we What if everything to death. And the problem is well over 90% of what we what if about we don't have any control over. And that's the difference between us and dogs. Dogs don't do what ifs. And on September 11, when I was working with my fifth guy, dog, Roselle, nothing directly, really threatened her, and so as soon as we got home, she is ready to play. It was all over, and it's because she doesn't deal with it the way we have taught ourselves, or have been taught, to deal with things. And we What if everything so much that we create a lot more fear in our lives than we need to have, which is, which is so unfortunate, if we could learn to step back from that the Nick Klingenmith ** 18:52 the speech I gave the other night told my story, as well as centered on a couple of themes that really would have resonated with that particular crowd, but one of them we talked a lot about, was fear was one that they kept kind of bouncing around after the fact. And I say that fear only exists in my imagination, and it's only power sources me, and it's that we suffer more from our own imaginations than we do reality. Sure, we create these things, but if we take just even a moment, and it's hard, even if you think, even if you think through logically, I don't think you can necessarily think through fear. And I'll, I'll speak to that in just a moment, but look back at all the times we were afraid. I found no monsters under the bed or in the closet. Like 90% of the things that I've been afraid of. Also, not only can I get out control, but they also haven't happened, right? Most of them will never manifest. You know, that said, the reason I think that you can't net even though you should be able to logically think through fear and understand that it probably doesn't exist, fear also hits on our emotions and stuff like that. So you. The I do believe that we can then move beyond fear, and therefore action is how we conquer fear. Michael Hingson ** 20:07 Well, I think that, I guess I differ just a little bit. I think fear is a real thing in a sense, and partly it's a physical physiology, physiological reaction. I will never tell people not to be afraid, because I don't think that overall, we can do that. But what I tell people absolutely is you can learn to control fear and use it as a very powerful tool to help you. If you choose to do that, fear is is something that can cause you to focus, or if you don't learn to control it, it will overwhelm you, or, as I put it, blind you or paralyze you. But it is, it is there, and maybe the time will come when we can completely eliminate the concept. But mostly it's there, in part, because it's a physiological thing that we also encounter. But again, you mentioned the seals earlier, and they've learned to control fear. They're not going to tell you they're not afraid, but they're going to tell you that they can control it and use it to their advantage. Um, Nick Klingenmith ** 21:12 we don't. We don't differ at all. By the way, the because I didn't fear itself isn't, isn't real. It's our fears are liars, those, most of the time, are the manifestations of the doubt. Fear, of course, is a real thing. Here's what I like to say, Okay, I'm with you, yeah, because I'm afraid of snakes and heights, yet I spend my weekends crawling around swamps and climbing up mountains. But it's not because I'm unafraid. It's I move beyond the fear. I do it anyway, and it I'm still afraid. I'm never going to handle a snake if I see one on the course, I'm going the other direction as fast as I can. It's just that I've, I have to find a way to not let it prevent me from living my life. And so I look for those things to you know, whatever I step into fear, I create. I make my world broader. But I don't know if you ever read the book, fear is fueled by Patrick Sweeney, great book, but he really talks a lot about the difference between fear and courage. Because or being fearless, you'd have to be a sociopath. Yeah, you'd have to have a complete disconnection from reality. And plus, like you said, Fear is very healthy. It is a good idea to fear the hot flame over the stove. It's a good idea to fear the Mack truck going down the highway if I want to go run into the street. Also, fear can be an indicator. You know, I when I was afraid for my job, I knew it's because I wasn't doing it. If I'm afraid for my home, it's because I'm not financially prepared. You know, if fear tells me what's important to me as well. So it's not always a bad thing, like, like we've been saying, though it's what you do with it or what you do about it. So Michael Hingson ** 22:51 you wouldn't even want to pick up a garden snake or a king snake or anything. Oh, no way, huh? Nick Klingenmith ** 22:57 I don't care if it had, like, tickets for Vegas and a cure for cancer in its mouth. Put that demon thing, that demon cord away. Michael Hingson ** 23:07 Well, I have, I have played with some snakes, but I also recognize that they're, they're not like me, and you have to be cautious even among the most non poisonous snakes, and that is something that we have to deal with. But I guess I don't fear them. I'm probably more cautious around a black widow spider than a snake than my wife. There you go. Well. But the other part about snakes is, of course, not knowing necessarily, if I encounter snakes, what they are, I'm going to probably avoid them until I know a whole lot more from somebody else about them. And if I hear rattlers, I'm going to definitely deal with that accordingly and freeze or whatever. So Nick Klingenmith ** 23:55 that's why my fears are rational, because you would be naturally afraid of the potential consequences of the snake, which is what we should be afraid of, right? If we're getting afraid of something, right? I'm afraid of the snake. I'm afraid it's of its sheer existence. My Michael Hingson ** 24:10 My brother in law, when he was a kid, my wife used to tell this story, and her parents told the story, and they all passed now, but he came in one day, or came from somewhere, and he was holding a Black Widow and going, Yeah, that's really strange, but eventually he let it go, but he was just holding on to it and showing it to everybody. Fine. I don't think he would do that today, though. Yeah, Nick Klingenmith ** 24:41 Mo, I feel like again, maybe logic and thinking prevents us from doing really silly things like that from time to time. Yeah, there Michael Hingson ** 24:48 is that. On the other hand, I've never been a skier, and I'm not afraid of skiing, but I love to tease people and say I'm not going to go skiing, because I know what happened to Sonny Bono and I know. Those trees are out there waiting for me. And no matter where I am in relation to the trees, they're going to come out and get me. And in reality, I know intellectually that if somebody said, Come on, really ski. If I were up in an area where there was a ski resort and we had snow and all that sort of stuff, and there was a reasonably gentle ski slope, I would try it, but it's fun to tease people and say, heck no, I'm not going to go out there and let those trees get Nick Klingenmith ** 25:28 me. I think what you just said is kind of important, because I look at it like hot sauce, all right. I when I was younger, I could eat the hot or the hot. Nowadays, not so much, but I still enjoy hot sauce, but if it gets too hot, I can't enjoy it at all. It will ruin the entire meal. I can't even eat it. And that's sort of where the fear comes in, or doing things that we're fearful of, because if you just throw me right into it, that's not going to be exhilarating, and that's not going to be something I'm going to come back from and want to come back from and want to do again and say, I conquered that. That's not going to expand my universe. That's going to send me crawling under the bed. So, yeah, if you don't like the ski, if you're afraid of the trees, the bunny slope is where you need to be. Well, Michael Hingson ** 26:14 having having never skied, I would want to start out there anyway, but, um, but I know intellectually, I'm not really afraid of it. I've just never really been around skiing. Now, my wife was in a wheelchair her whole life, so we really never were up visiting her, her brother, my brother in law, or in any other area, when we were really around in a skiing environment, which is what it's really about i i would never avoid skiing, but it's just not the thing that is the most exciting thing for me to do. I've ice skated in my life, and I was out on an ice skating rink for a few hours, and at the very end, I fell and sprained my ankle. And I haven't really been ice skating since, but I am, but I I'm not afraid to go do it. It's just again. It's not something that that I've done, but I, I think life is an adventure, and I love to explore things. And you mentioned hot sauce, there used to be a show on Food Network with Bobby Flay, and I'm forgetting the other guy, who was, oh, I'm blanking out on his name, but it was called grilling and chilling. And he was from, he owned a restaurant down in in Philadelphia called Jack's Firehouse. And we ended up having to go there. Well, we'd end up going there. Didn't have to go there, but Karen, my wife, and I, went there. They have something there, which is made of the hottest peppers and so on that. You can imagine. It's called hot lava, and they bring you a bowl of it, and I touched my finger to it, and then just tasted my finger, and I went, I'm not going to eat that stuff. That's just too hot for me. But again, I can say safely that if I had to, because I didn't have any choice, I wouldn't be so afraid that I wouldn't do something like eat it if it had to be on something to make it edible or whatever. But I do think you're right. I think that fear is really all about what we do and how how we learn to control it, and that's the important part about it. And all too often, we just don't learn to do that. And so as you point out, well over 90% of the things that we fear never will come to pass, never have come to pass, and we're just the ones who are creating the environment that makes it so much scarier for us. Nick Klingenmith ** 28:36 Plus, are we really afraid of the thing, or are we afraid of the consequences of the thing, yeah? You know, when you really take it all the way back down to the thing you're most afraid of, you may realize what you're most afraid of is a nuisance and not a catastrophe, right? Michael Hingson ** 28:55 Yeah? And, and for me, um, I'll, I'll face consequences, and what I the only thing I want to as much as possible know is what the consequences are, and then I'll make a, what you would call a rational decision as to whether I want to do it. But I can take the basic fear out of the situation and turn it into making it somewhat analytical. And the result of that is that it becomes what we're talking about here, which is a choice, you Nick Klingenmith ** 29:29 know, I'll take it back down in the beginning, because I'm sorry, did I cut you off just now? No, no, okay, you know the decisions that went into the storm, right? So we, I gave you the reasons as to why we were there, but why we decided to stay. But then there were other things to consider. Um, I mean, the house is, like, rated for whatever the wind the windows go 140 like it's a new roof, blah, blah, blah, like it's, it's about as safe as it can get, all right, we we weren't going to die. We weren't going to get flooded. We sandbagged. Everything we did, all this, whatever. So then the decision had to be like, if it is bad, we have to understand, if there's like, catastrophic damage to the area and something goes wrong, they're not going to be able to get to us. So we might be without days. You know, we know. We knew we would lose power. We might be without food, water and access to other human beings and communications for up to, like, a week. So we prepared for that. That said, right, we were as logically prepared as possible. When you're sitting in the middle of a cat four hurricane, I'm not going to tell you I wasn't scared. I mean, like you could look out the window and even the middle of, I mean, it was, it was late when it hit, I mean, trees that don't move were swaying hard back and forth, and you weren't totally unsure that one of them wasn't going to end up in your living room. So those were completely natural fears, even though I was as secure as it could logically be. It's a cat four hurricane, and it can do what it wants. Michael Hingson ** 31:00 Did did you though, while that was happening and you were seeing all that, did the thought also flash in your mind? Yeah, but I did make the choice to stay here so I can deal with it, or I will deal with as best I can. I Nick Klingenmith ** 31:13 was already prepared for, you know, in my mind I had, I mean, by the door, we had two doors that were accessible because we barricaded everything else up. And by each of them were, you know, shoes, towels, wet gear, things of case I needed to, case a tree came through and crushed and I had to do something I don't know, whatever, like, you know, the the car was in a position. If we had to bug out, we could bug out. If it, you know, we kept the lifted vehicle here, move the other one down the road. Preparations were about as made. But this is where obstacle course racing literally taught me the process to this. Because I love running Ultras, 50 Ks, you know, 70 obstacles up mountains, 10 to 12 hour days of just misery, because everything will go wrong. Everything will go wrong. Whatever your race plan is, things are going to go wrong. And so I've literally just been practicing tackling one unexpected obstacle at a time, and that's all it is. It's a mental process of right? You prepare for what you can and when things happen, you have to just pause and say, what is the obstacle? What is the challenge I'm facing? What is the outcome I need, and what needs to be done to achieve it? Go Michael Hingson ** 32:29 deal with that obstacle, and then go to the next one. That's Nick Klingenmith ** 32:33 That's it. I mean, if, if Windows got punctured out, and then we do this, if something else happened, then you begin to prioritize, protect the dogs. My wife is fully capable of taking care of herself and also doing things to protect the home. So we had our assignments, but instead, you know, because of that, she fell asleep in the middle of the worst of it, which is a good thing. The dogs were comfortable. Nothing bad happened. And I mean, we lost power. But whatever that happens. Michael Hingson ** 33:01 I was in a sports car rally once, and I was the navigator, so the the course, the instructions were in braille, and I started to read it, and then, and I was reading to the driver, so that the driver followed directions, and I started to get a little bit ahead, and the driver said, no, no, no, don't do that. All I want to know is, what's our next job? And that struck a chord with me, because I I realized, Oh, he wants to focus on just the one thing which makes perfect sense. And that's been a and I was like, 13 at the time. That was a life lesson, though, that I that I really took to heart. Again. You can think about all sorts of things. You do need to make preparations, but when you're in the middle of something, ultimately, you've got to deal with it one step at a time. It's Nick Klingenmith ** 33:57 It's like chess. You want to consider all your moves, but you only make one move at a time, and I'll tell you, this is something that is so idiot proof I hate that it's taken me 45 years to really get the hang of it, but there's been no better teacher for me in that than sobriety, because I truly learned one day at a time, living and as an entrepreneur and A new speaker and a new coach. This past 18 months, it's sometimes been hour at a time living because life continues to happen, but the way that I will solve most of my problems is with the new action. And so I and you can't just ignore things all the time, but I can say for one hour, I'm focused on this right now. And I literally will say out loud often, no, I'm doing this right now. I'm doing this right now. Even on my run, sometimes I'm like, nope, hey, I'm here right now. Michael Hingson ** 34:51 Do you do things like, when you're running, listen to podcasts or anything like that, or do you just focus on the running? Neither I listen to music and day. Mean, okay, well, so you you do other things while you're running. Okay, why? I shouldn't have just said podcast. But rather, I pay Nick Klingenmith ** 35:07 attention to because I run by heart rate. So it'll be like 10 minutes at this zone, 10 minutes at this zone, back and forth. So I have to pay attention. But I set my watch to heart rate. I don't even look at the pace and and so I have to monitor that loosely every, you know, just a little bit at my watch. Also, I will have to look at my diabetes, my blood sugar, every 10 minutes, 15 minutes or so. But beyond that, glucose monitor, yeah, I have it on my phone, yeah. So I'll do that. And then, other than that, I listen to music, and my playlist is very eclectic, but I, I will daydream of things, you know, this is where I set and just daydream of really big goals, or race goals or life goals, and just just fantasize like just, let's say it drift away into that. But running Michael Hingson ** 35:59 gives you the opportunity to do that, which is what's so cool. I There are things that that I do that I call them sort of brainless activities, but I do them with the idea that while they're going on, I can be thinking about other things. I don't have to focus my full attention on them. And the result of that is that I do accomplish other things, or I set goals, or, as you say, daydreaming things happen because of that. Nick Klingenmith ** 36:28 And for me, I learned a long time ago. Even though I can be a fierce competitor, I'll go back to my beach volleyball days. Let's say you and I met before the game. You were we're going to play against each other, and I liked you. We were casual with each other. Whatever I would play great. But let's say for some reason we didn't like each other, and then all of a sudden I was kind of pissed off. I would play terrible. I I don't play well, like that. I play well, and I'm loose having fun, yeah. And so since I run my heart rate, I am acutely aware of what a negative a negative thought does to your body, because I literally will turn my thoughts to something negative. And even though I am not making any more effort, I'm not running any faster, my heart rate is jumping six to eight beats a minute. Yeah, so that's also why I don't want to solve problems when I'm out there. You know, that's where I do want to drift away, because when I'm in my work day, right? I'm not daydreaming, I'm working. I'm focused on tasks and things that I can do with other people or places that are required to do during work time. Michael Hingson ** 37:37 But it's great to have the opportunity to just let your mind go. And I think we need to do more of that. One of the things I also advocate a lot is that people should take time at night, when they're falling asleep or just before, and be introspective, think about what happened during the day, and do it in a in a constructive way. Never say, why did this fail? Why was I a failure here? But rather, what can I learn from this that didn't go as well as I expected? I've learned to not ever call myself my own worst critic anymore. I'm my own best teacher, and that's the way it should be, because first of all, it's a positive thing, and secondly, I am my own best teacher. No one could teach me anything. They can provide me with information, but I really have to teach myself and understand it and emotionally and intellectually deal with it. But I think it's it's so important to have that time just to let your mind go off and do things. Nick Klingenmith ** 38:36 One of the worst things as people that we do is we start the day with yesterday, yeah. And one of the ways to prevent that, which takes practice, because we're used to it, is we also have to finish the day the day before. So like you're talking about, and this is part of my sobriety, too. It's take that daily inventory, and then I like to after doing sort of doing that exercise myself, I'll also say a nightly prayer, and then I'm going to meditate for at least five minutes, sometimes 30 to 45 probably five. And at that point I'm not trying to think about anything. And I go that that point is when I'm I'm listening or, right, you know, just trying to clear it out. But I think I remember a couple years ago, I was training for this race, and it was a big race, 50k mountain race, and I started to kind of have a panic moment of like, Oh, my God, I have to do all this training. What am I going to do? How am I going to prepare for this? I'm never going to do it in time. And so I asked myself, well, what's the most important thing I need to do right now to hit my goal? And the answer was, I needed to make sure I woke up to do my training in the morning, because that's the only other thing I can impact right I can't do anything about the next three months. So then I asked myself, well, if I need to make that happen, what is the most important thing that needs to happen right now for me to hit my goals? And this is when I was stretching and meditating at night. And I was like, well, I need a good night's sleep so I'll wake up and exercise. Okay, what's the most important thing I can do right now to make sure I have a good night's sleep? Go to sleep. Mountain came down to one breath. Yeah, I hear you. And that's it. I mean, it's I have it written on my whiteboard over here. It says, break things down to the stupid Yeah, Michael Hingson ** 40:26 and eventually get to sleep. Nick Klingenmith ** 40:28 I mean, it's just the one, the baby steps that I can take. I remember, I was reading Miracle Morning at that same time, and I used to, because I was, I was struggling, and so I was using my meditations for visualization, and I was spending too much time there trying to create a future. And it wasn't giving me that relaxation, and it wasn't. It was actually stressing me out more, and I just needed to relax and just to focus on the single most controllable thing I could and just taking it, you know, take some pressure off myself, and that really was such a simple fix. Michael Hingson ** 41:01 Yeah, I hear you, if I may, you've talked about being sober now for I think you said 10 years, yep, what? What led you to finally make that decision that you had to change and be sober. Nick Klingenmith ** 41:17 My final drunk was very public. And by what I mean by that is I was supposed to be the speaker at my company's conference the next day in Vegas, and instead, I got thrown out of the hotel and trespassed in the middle of the night for trying to have sex with a hooker in a broom closet after apparently getting in a fight with somebody. Well, my girlfriend slept down the hall. I wasn't allowed back at the hotel. Told my boss, my lawyer, I lied to my girlfriend about whatever we were getting thrown out of. It took about five hours for us to get a new hotel, and when my head finally hit the pillow, I said out loud, I don't want to live this way anymore. But that was just the final moment. Because what led up to that was I was a very highly functional alcoholic, and I had been for only a number of years. To be honest, I had alcohol wasn't a big part of my life for a while, and then when it came back in, it came back in rapidly. And so really only a period about five or six years I became a highly functional alcoholic, and I mean highly my career flourished during this time, you know. And the thing is, I didn't I wasn't an everyday drinker. I didn't get drunk every time I drank, and bad things didn't happen every time I did, but more and more, my decisions were getting more selfish, my behavior was getting more destructive, and alcohol was just playing more of a bigger role in my life. So I it was when I got cancer the third time that gave me the excuse I needed to crawl deep into the bottle, because at that point it was already sort of critical mass. I wouldn't go anywhere unless I knew I was going to get drunk. Everything was selfish. I didn't know about it. I didn't think about it, and I was actually ready to quit because I didn't like the way other people would talk about me. So that sounds like a healthy reason, right? And so so I tried to quit on my own, and I spent a couple months just white knuckling it, and I tempted fate, and I went to every happy hour. I threw beer Olympics in my house. And I just, I think I wanted to prove that I could do both without, you know, be who I was, without being who I was. But what I also didn't realize at a time that alcohol wasn't the problem. Alcohol was just a symptom. Who I was was the problem. And so when I got cancer for the third time, they told me they couldn't operate. Um, spoiler alert, the tumor's still there. It's been there over 10 years, but that gave me an excuse to crawl deep into the bottle. And so for about a month, I mean, I just, I was drinking at that point, because who's going to mess with me, right? I have inoperable cancer. That was the excuse I needed, and it that's what really led me to take the gloves off, which led me to Vegas. So I tell you, this cancer saved my life, because I would have died for my drink and long before I would have died from the cancer. Yeah, Michael Hingson ** 44:19 I hear you. Well, you've said that you recognize that you didn't overcome adversity. You survived it. What does what does that mean? And how do you overcome adversity? Nick Klingenmith ** 44:29 I understand surviving it is when? How did I how do I say it for someone else? You know? It was because, as I'm standing there in the totality, here's the thing I told you, how I was growing up. You know, this sort of independent kid? Right child of neglect grows up to be independent, weird, right child with trust issues grows up to be self sufficient, cool, but at some time along the way, that just becomes resentment. It and fear, and it works against us, and that's what creates a little bit of the victim mindset, and so, and it's easy to get that way when bad things happen to us, we feel like it's unfair. I mean, it's just natural. Nobody's immediately like, oh, I guess it's just my turn. So I think living with all those things. But this is where, where part of it gets confusing is I survived something, and people would tell me how tough I was. I would all I did was not die from cancer. I didn't do surgery, I didn't prescribe treatment. All I did was not die. I didn't cure cancer for anyone else. So I survived it. I didn't overcome it. All I did was show up to a doctor's appointment like, I'm lucky that I got thyroid cancer and not prostrate cancer. That's it. So I didn't overcome anything. I'm a diabetic. I'm still diabetic. How did I overcome diabetes? By having it. No sir, I was surviving it. All I was doing was being diabetic, but the mindset of thinking that, man, maybe when am I going to get a break? All these things keep happening to me, happening to me. When you think that way, you're not overcoming any of it. You are just surviving it. And you know what? God bless you. Because I know it's hard for a lot people go through a lot, and it's sometimes hard to handle. To overcome it, though, we have to do something with it. That's how you overcome it. I'm a diabetic who helps other diabetics realize they can be ultra endurance athletes. I race with the words fuck cancer written across my chest. I'm currently fundraising for the American Cancer Society for men were pink. I do what I can to help other people who are hearing cancer. I have cancer for the first you have cancer for the first time. That's how I get back there. I try to help other alcoholics recover and get sober. I write books and share about my fears and things that other people can relate to in the hopes that they, too, can overcome those obstacles. And that's how I overcome it. Those things lose power over me now, yeah, Michael Hingson ** 47:08 and I think that last sentence is the real key to the whole thing. You're not giving them power. You're you're putting your power in your mindset elsewhere. You're not giving power to diabetes. Yeah, it's there. You're not giving power to drink. Since you become sober, have you ever taken a drink anymore? No, not at all. So you know you you took away the power, and you're putting the power into the mindset and all the things that you're expressing, which is so important, I think again, that's so much of what most of us tend not to learn, that a lot of the things that we deal with, we deal with because we give them the power, rather than moving forward and putting the power where it really needs to go. Nick Klingenmith ** 48:04 It's we raise, we raise kids this way, man. And I mean, they're raising the moment to say it's not fair. Wait, everyone's supposed to get a turn, and that's not true. Well, everyone does get a turn, but they get it in a different way, and something I've come to appreciate, because here's here's something that if I wasn't a speaker, and if I had not written a book, I would never talk about cancer, because I feel like I'm sitting at the kitty table, and it'd be, quite frankly, like it's hard for me, like I had an easy road, considering cancer. I'm alive. I've had multiple surgeries, but I mean, God, compared to what so many people that I know have gone through and the people that we've lost, it took me a long time to be okay with the fact that I'm alive and to realize too that that's not something I need to apologize for, but especially if I'm gonna be a speaker and talk about having cancer, and in any way, let that, like me benefit from that, then I have to do something with that. That's what gives me the fuel. And I didn't know how to it was the first time that that I wrote f cancer across my chest. It was because a friend of mine had told me about their diagnosis and they were struggling with it, and I just, I didn't know how to help them, and I just, I just wanted to let them know they weren't alone. So literally, that morning, at five in the morning, I grabbed Sharpie and I wrote it on my chest, and I went out and I did the race, and I was expecting people, their kids around. I was a little iffy about using the F bomb, but I think cancer deserves all four letters, and everyone intended to agree with me that day, I was really surprised at just people tell me about their their loved ones they've lost, or the people struggling with it, or about their the people that have thrived. And I mean, I love hearing the survivor stories, because you don't hear enough of them, yeah, and it, what I've realized is you just. People know they're not alone. They just let it's like you're just letting people have told me about, like, their four year old niece while under the barbed wire crawl of a race. I mean, like, clearly, they they need to share. And so if that's if I help even just that little bit, then that's the role I get to play. And I say, get to play. And Michael Hingson ** 50:19 I'm with you. I hear you. I talk about resilience, I talk about teamwork and trust. And, of course, tell my September 11 story. And I decided to start to do that. Well, first of all, it was my wife and I together. We decided that I should do that, because if we could help people move forward from September 11, and then, of course, later, from so many other things, teach people that blindness isn't the problem they think it is, and teach them about guide dogs and other things like that, then it makes life worthwhile. So I love to tell people today that what we decided was that selling life and philosophy was a whole lot more rewarding and satisfying than managing a computer hardware sales team and selling computer hardware, and it is Nick Klingenmith ** 51:03 the other night. The conference I spoke at was a sales conference for a company in the logistics industry, but I've been in that industry for 20 years. I've spoken at least at a dozen conferences. However, all of them, except this one, were on sales or logistics, this one was on fear and overcoming adversity and finding purpose and finding purpose in your team and just thriving and leading the charge. And it was, it was such a different experience, and so much more fulfilling, yeah, in that 45 minutes than any of the time I'd ever spoken on another stage. Michael Hingson ** 51:46 What do you think is your your greatest strength as a speaker? What do you really bring to speaking that makes you so successful at it? Nick Klingenmith ** 51:56 I think that this will change over time as but I'm going to say right now, it's, it's simply my authenticity, and maybe not even that may not even change over time, but I'm very raw. I'm very vulnerable. I hold nothing back, and the thing I hear most about myself is that I'm relatable, and so I would say that would be be a differentiator, especially if you consider and this isn't a bad thing for someone who is far more known or professional or more of a brand name. It's not like they're not being raw and authentic, but it gets lost on their it gets lost on their audience over time, and you know, when they're more mainstream. Michael Hingson ** 52:41 What do you think the the most powerful technique or tool is that you use that people do relate to in store, in in speaking, Nick Klingenmith ** 52:53 I speak directly to them and share personal stories. Yeah, that's yeah. I mean, that's it. When I say I I should send you the link later, but I the talk I did the other night. I Maybe it's nervous energy, but I am just back and forth, back and forth, back and forth, back and forth. But I'll tell you what, I made eye contact with every single person in that room, every other second throughout the thing I was I speak to them, and they are personal stories, then they're completely naked. There's nothing that I won't hold back because you know who I am now the obstacle course racing book, right? None of that matters if it's not, if I'm not completely honest about who I was, if I try to sell myself as having been someone else or something else, then I'm not going to help anybody. Yeah. Michael Hingson ** 53:46 Well, and I find, as a speaker, that stories, and they have to be authentic, has to be you, but that stories make a difference. And I've, I've been in situations where a speaker's bureau hired me to go and deliver a speech, and I get there to find out that the speakers bureau was totally inaccurate and incorrect as to the kind of the organization that it was that I was going to speak to. And it taught me to learn that I have to customize every talk I give, and I need to be able to adjust, if you will, on the fly. Sometimes, in the case of one particular talk that I gave, it was a totally different kind of environment. What I was led to believe, fortunately, I could find stories to tell these people that showed that I related to them, and I got invited back to other parts of the organization later because of that. But I think that stories are the most important thing that we as speakers can bring, and they have to be true. They have to be authentic. Can't make it up. People can see through that. A mile away, Nick Klingenmith ** 54:58 I feel like I have to tell the. Vegas story. It's the lowest moment of my life, and if it just it also just speaks to all of it in one incident. So it's kind of like it, but if the person who needs to hear it, you know, I, I don't want someone to just see who I am now and not relate Michael Hingson ** 55:22 well, this podcast is all about unstoppable mindset. What are some ways to develop an unstoppable mindset? Do you think Nick Klingenmith ** 55:28 for one we got to go through to get through it, we have to develop what we've been talking about, this sort of obstacle immunity, or at least this understanding that there's always going to be a next challenge. If we ever think that the mountain will be climbed. We can't be unstoppable. We simply have to accept that the purpose of life is to continue to climb. That's that's one thing, and how do we keep how do we keep doing that? Then achievement. I'm highly achievement driven. You can call it motivated, but I don't think so. I have to look for carrots. So whether it be personal, professional, physical, mental, emotional, spiritual, some sort of development is also how we continue to develop that unstoppable mind. Because the only way to be on there's we can't be 100% unstoppable. We always have to continue to progress and to toughen up and to keep moving for it, one of the things though, that has to be ultimately critical. And people talk about this, but I don't know if they really spend enough time on it. Self belief is the gateway to an unstoppable mindset. You have to believe it before you can see it. Michael Hingson ** 56:32 Yeah, I'm listening. I just agreed with you. Yeah, Nick Klingenmith ** 56:36 no, I know I was I was cutting, I was stopping. Michael Hingson ** 56:39 Yeah, I agree, though. I mean, you've you've got to believe it, and you have to believe it intellectually and in your heart, you have to believe it emotionally as well. It is, as I said, if, if you're not authentic, people will see through you a mile away, no matter what I when, when I started selling, I took a Dale Carnegie sales course, and one of the things that I learned in that course is that the best salespeople are teachers. They're counselors, they guide, but because they're teachers, they also adopt. If they're really successful, stories, they can tell you stories that you, whoever you are, can relate to. And so they've they've analyzed and they understand what you need, and they can tell you stories to show you why what they have will work, or the other side of it is won't work. And I've had that situation happen where I've been selling a product and went into a meeting and learned that clearly what we had didn't work, and it's a choice. Do you still try to push your product on them or not? And I think that that's the worst thing that you can do, is to push a product that's going to jeopardize any relationship you have. And I've told customers in the past, here's why my product won't do what you need. Here's what will. And the result of that has always been calls later that say we really appreciated what you had to say. We've got another opportunity, and you taught us what we need to know your product is perfect. We don't want to put it out to bid. Just tell us a price and we'll order it today. Order it Nick Klingenmith ** 58:23 today. In the book I published a couple months ago, selling inspired, I actually talk about what I call being a bar stool sales person. Nick Klingenmith ** 58:34 Just tell personal stories like pretend you're at the bar talking to the prospect, and convey those things, because people do want to buy from people these days, it's tricky, because they are heavily gravitated towards convenience, but so we have to change our approach on how we get to know them, or, more importantly, let them get to know us, especially if you're buying virtually, like a lot of people are These days, it's not the bar stool salesman has to, has to become a social app sales person, essentially. But people buy from people make it easy for them to get to know who you are. Connect on a different level. Because, I mean, I'm even part of a a Spartan group. Excuse me. There's about 15,000 of us in this Facebook community, and we are very strict about not promoting businesses and services and stuff like that. You know, this is supposed to be about obstacle course, racing, tips, tricks, positive vibes, whatever. But I recently suggested, and we just actually implemented something that we're calling it the the What is your profession? Because there's 15,000 people. Now I don't know the 15,000 but I'm actually close. I know several 100, and I'm actually close with several dozen. If any one of those people has a service that I need, I'd rather buy from them, sure. And if any one of them is like, Hey, I do this, and that they're getting the message from me, like you. Said, Hey, Michael, can you do this? Here's my email. Send it done? Yeah, Michael Hingson ** 1:00:08 yeah, it's still connectionalism, and no matter what, you've gotta be able to connect or you've gotta create an environment where people want to connect with you again, though, that has to be authentic. You can't just fake it. That'll never work. It's Nick Klingenmith ** 1:00:27 actually, it's hard for a lot of people. Now, I've been lucky for a while because couple things, going back in time, I've actually just been highly passionate about sales. So as far as like social content, I'd post sales, stuff, whatever. But I say that I'm lucky because of my story. I mean that would be like, you say your story. And what I mean by that is we have something different to talk about. I don't have to talk about being a speaker. I talk about things that are helpful to other people, and it just makes it easier, like, easier to engage now with, like, one of the guys that I'm coaching, he has no earthly idea how to start building or putting out any sort of content. And I'm like, bro, what do you like? He's like, like, just and so he actually posted something about the NHL that night, and it got decent content and feedback. Because I was like, he's like, You know what LinkedIn is not for? I go Shut up if we were at a standing at the bar together, like having a at a networking event. I don't want your spec sheet from your company. Yeah, I want to know what you're interested in and get to know you. So tell me, let people get to know you. That's it. Because when they click on your profile, if they don't, if all they see is your business brand, they're like, Okay, great, moving on. Michael Hingson ** 1:01:34 Yeah, it is, it is. It is crazy. We you talked earlier about how we bring up kids, and we bring up children in such a strange way. They don't learn to overcome fea
Step into the beating heart of British obstacle course racing with the Nuts Challenge 3K – a course that has defined the essence of OCR in the United Kingdom since 2010. Unlike any ordinary race, this woodland technical masterpiece delivers approximately 35 obstacles within just 3 kilometers, creating what seasoned racers describe as "relentless" – a perfect descriptor for this iconic event at Camelot Events.What makes the Nuts 3K extraordinary is its remarkable balance of challenge and accessibility. The course winds through technical forest trails where you'll encounter everything from suspension obstacles and hanging rigs to water crossings and natural terrain challenges. Your heart rate will spike within minutes as you tackle the infamous Monty's hurdles, Valkyrie rings, and various technical rigs, with barely enough recovery time between obstacles to catch your breath.Team Nuts member Khani, who has trained at this venue for eight years and earned numerous international podiums, reveals that success here doesn't necessarily come from outright speed. Rather, it rewards consistent energy management and technical efficiency – knowing when to conserve and when to push. The course's unique layout forces racers to utilize every OCR skill: upper body strength, agility, push strength, compromise running, and the mental fortitude to maintain focus when fatigue sets in.For first-timers, the Nuts 3K offers a comprehensive introduction to what makes obstacle course racing special – the perfect venue to experience the sport's original spirit. For veterans, it's a technical playground that tests your ability to execute obstacles efficiently while managing your energy through varied terrain. Either way, you'll leave with muddy trainers, possibly bruised arms from chicken-winging through obstacles, and the satisfaction of conquering one of Britain's most authentic OCR experiences.Don't miss this opportunity to race at the spiritual home of UK obstacle course racing on April 27th. Sign up now and discover why the Nuts Challenge continues to set the standard for technical obstacle racing excellence in the 3K Series.Support the show
Siri Englund's name is synonymous with excellence in obstacle course racing. From claiming victory at the inaugural OCR World Championship in 2014 to her recent comeback after years of injury struggles, her journey epitomizes the resilience that defines true champions.Few athletes can claim such diverse athletic credentials. Before conquering obstacle courses, Siri was a wrestler who discovered her passion for running during preseason training when teammates dreaded cardio work. This unique background led her to Toughest, one of Sweden's first OCR series, where she immediately competed in the elite division and found her calling.After her groundbreaking OCR World Championship win, Siri's path took an unexpected turn toward military pentathlon. For eight years, she focused on this discipline, developing exceptional technical skills and an unmatched understanding of obstacle flow. Her military training emphasized precision, memorization, and fluid movement through obstacles – creating a mantra she still follows today: "in, through, and out" – approaching obstacles at speed, executing efficiently, and immediately transitioning back to running.The military career culminated in a world championship victory in 2023, but years of repetitive training had taken a severe toll on her body. Plagued by Achilles injuries that threatened to end her athletic career entirely, Siri made the difficult decision to step away from pentathlon and return to her OCR roots with a more balanced approach to training.What followed was remarkable – by incorporating more cycling, varied strength work, and technical obstacle training, she's now running pain-free for the first time in eight years. This physical rehabilitation has sparked a competitive renaissance, allowing her to set ambitious goals for upcoming championships in Portugal and Sweden.Throughout our conversation, Siri offers invaluable insights into training philosophy, the evolution of OCR in Sweden as an officially recognized sport, and finding balance between technical proficiency and running capacity. Her perspective bridges the gap between military precision and the creative challenge of modern obstacle racing.Have you found your perfect training balance? Join us at Accountability Corner as we explore what makes champions tick and how everyday athletes can apply these lessons to their own OCR journeys.Support the show
IRONMAN Master Coach Matt Dixon hosts Gwendolyn Bounds, author of "Not Too Late," on the Purple Patch podcast as part of the Win Cycle series, which focuses on performance in various aspects of life. Alongside Purple Patch Fitness Co-Founder Kelli McMaster, Gwendolyn shares her journey from an unathletic childhood to becoming a competitive Spartan racer in her 40s. She emphasizes the importance of mindset, commitment, and breaking routines. Gwendolyn discusses the transformative power of obstacle course racing, which improved her health, work performance, and overall life satisfaction. She highlights the significance of community and coaching in her journey. The conversation also touches on the benefits of integrating physical challenges into one's life, regardless of age or current fitness level. If you have any questions about the Purple Patch program, feel free to reach out at info@purplepatchfitness.com. Purple Patch and Episode Resources Learn more about Gwendolyn Bounds and her book, “Not Too Late: The Power of Pushing Limits at Any Age” at: www.gwendolynbounds.com Check out our world-class coaching and training options: Tri Squad: https://www.purplepatchfitness.com/squad 1:1 Coaching: https://www.purplepatchfitness.com/11-coached Run Squad: https://www.purplepatchfitness/com/run-squad Strength Squad: https://www.purplepatchfitness.com/strength-1 Live & On-Demand Bike Sessions: https://www.purplepatchfitness.com/bike Explore our training options in detail: https://bit.ly/3XBo1Pi Live in San Francisco? Explore the Purple Patch Performance Center: https://center.purplepatchfitness.com Everything you need to know about our methodology: https://www.purplepatchfitness.com/our-methodology Amplify your approach to nutrition with Purple Patch + Fuelin https://www.fuelin.com/purplepatch Get access to our free training resources, insight-packed newsletter and more at purplepatchfitness.com
OCR ist nicht einfach nur „Laufen mit ein paar Hindernissen“ – es ist eine komplexe Kombination aus Ausdauer, Kraft, Griffkraft, Technik und Koordination. Trotzdem trainieren viele Athleten, als würden sie einen klassischen Straßenlauf oder Trailrun absolvieren – und wundern sich dann, warum sie an den Hindernissen scheitern oder nach einem Wettkampf völlig erschöpft sind. Deswegen spreche ich in dieser Folge mit Matthias Graute und Fabian Sinning über: ✅ die 5 größten Unterschiede zwischen reinem Lauftraining und OCR-Training ✅ Warum ein klassischer Lauftrainingsplan dich nicht optimal auf Hindernisrennen vorbereitet ✅ Welche Fehler viele machen & wie du sie vermeiden kannst ✅ Warum OCR ein strukturiertes Training erfordert & wie du dein Wissen gezielt erweitern kannst
Welcome to Episode 399 of the Strength Coach Podcast, brought to you by Perform Better! In this episode:Sumit Seth is on to show how Naamly's new tools helps track client progress through baseline measurements, habit tracking, and more. ( https://Naamly.com )Anthony chats with Alwyn Cosgrove about:- NEAT (Non-Exercise Activity Thermogenesis) and its crucial role in fat loss success.- Breaking down metabolic adaptation, energy balance, and why "eat less, move more" isn't always enough.- Practical tips to monitor and increase NEAT, including addressing common pitfalls like reduced activity during calorie deficits.- The "Screw the Nut" mindset shift for clients, emphasizing sustainable, long-term fat loss plans over crash diets.- Insights into training high-level Obstacle Course Racing athletes, covering qualities needed, periodization, and peaking strategies.This episode also features exciting updates on Perform Better events, including this summer's Summits, workshops, and free webinars designed to elevate your coaching game.Check out Perform Better for their latest sale, the New Signature Series and all the upcoming education.**Whether you're a fitness professional, strength coach, or athlete looking to optimize fat loss and performance, you'll find actionable strategies and inspiration here. Thanks for listening, and don't forget to subscribe for more expert insights and engaging discussions!CHAPTERS:00:00 - Show Intro01:45 - Sumit Seth demo of Naamly05:55 - Alwyn Cosgrove on Fat Loss Strategies11:27 - Understanding NEAT (Non-Exercise Activity Thermogenesis)16:09 - Overtraining and Under-fueling Risks19:28 - Setting Your Caloric Deficit Effectively22:47 - Importance of Protein in Diet23:58 - Managing the Rest of Your Calories25:16 - Dangers of Over-Exercising and Under-Eating26:59 - Significance of NEAT in Weight Loss31:38 - Client Conversations for Long-Term Commitment36:00 - Nutrition and Training Synergy36:30 - Drivers and Anchors in Coaching40:44 - Benefits of Intermittent Walking43:18 - Optimal Fat Loss Rate49:15 - Introduction to Obstacle Course Racing (OCR)56:30 - Origins of OCR01:00:01 - Effective OCR Training Techniques01:08:24 - Peaking Strategies for Athletes01:11:15 - Deciding When to Peak01:13:20 - Psychological Benefits of Peaking01:15:30 - Timing of Athletic Qualities01:17:30 - Managing a Team of Athletes01:18:44 - Wrapping Up the Discussion
In this engaging episode, we delve into the realities of training while navigating injuries, addressing the unique struggles athletes face in staying motivated. The conversations touch on personal experiences, illustrating the emotional rollercoaster that accompanies setbacks. We discuss how important it is to cultivate patience as athletes and find new ways to stay active and accountable when the usual routes are blocked.Join us as we navigate training adaptations—from cycling to strength workouts— while still maintaining a commitment to the sport we love: obstacle course racing. You'll hear about practical tips on accountability, how sharing goals enhances motivation, and personal reflections on the inevitability of injury in every athlete's journey. Discover how unique approaches, such as the intriguing mention of knitting, can not only provide comfort but also serve as creative outlets to ease stress and refocus during recovery.Packed with insights, this episode invites listeners to consider their own accountability practices, encouraging a community spirit where we share lessons learned and motivate one another. Don't miss out on discovering ways to keep training during injury setbacks and how to embrace the journey towards healing. Tune in, reflect, and reconnect with your passion for fitness! Be part of our journey, and please leave a review or share your experience with us; we'd love to hear what keeps you motivated!Support the show
Your Weekly dose of current news from the OCR and adventure running scene with Pub landlord Alan and Regular Ian If you have any questions about the show or are interested in advertising with us then please contact admin@ukocr.com Find out more about UKOCR by clicking Here Support UKOCR on Patreon Here or Buy us a beer if you like what we do If you want to join the Spartan Hurricane Heat try code POD30 first and if it sayd no, then try code POD20
Our latest podcast episode explores everything you need to prepare for the Tartan Warrior and the 3K Series. We dive into race strategies, essential training tips, and insider insights from race director Gavin Hogarth to ensure a successful race day.Overview of the 3K Series and Tartan WarriorInsights from race director Gavin HogarthKey features of the course and terrainHow to sign up and registration details Importance of the right shoes and gear Understanding race waves and seeding Tips for navigating obstacles and improving skillsRecommendations for spectators and event atmosphereFinal strategies for race day performanceBook now: Watch last year's race: https://www.entrycentral.com/tartanwarriorsat2025Support the show
We welcome Rapheala Dyer Nutritional Therapist and Naturopath.Discover how integral nutrition is for enhancing athletic performance while maintaining overall well-being. Raffi Dyer joins us to discuss the power of gut health and mindful eating, emphasising the importance of making sustainable dietary choices to fuel both training and everyday life.Join us on this exciting podcast as we dive into how nutrition fuels peak performance, the secrets of gut health, and simple meal prep hacks for busy lives! We'll tackle mindful eating, the psychology behind food choices, and share tips for building lifelong healthy habits. Plus, hear Raffi's unique take on personalised nutrition and why hydration is your daily superpower. It's time to supercharge your health—don't miss it!
This episode is one of the most raw and inspiring conversations I've ever had. I'm sitting down with Nick Klingensmith, a guy who's been through more than most of us can fathom. He is a four-time cancer survivor, Type 1 diabetic, recovering alcoholic, and obstacle course racing beast. But here's the kicker: it's not what he's been through that defines him; it's how he shows up every single day.Nick's story isn't just about survival; it's about thriving with purpose. We dive into what it really means to embrace vulnerability and confront ego head-on. You'll hear how Nick turned fear into fuel, tackled nearly 100 Spartan Races, and reframed his mindset to achieve what most people would call impossible.This isn't just another feel good story, it's a wake up call to stop letting fear hold you back. If you're tired of playing small, if you're ready to push past your limits, or if you just need that spark to reignite your purpose, this episode will hit you right where it counts.Let's go ALL IN.We Meet: Nick Klingensmith, Stride Motivation, LLCEpisode References:Sufferfest - https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/sufferfestNick's Book - https://www.stridemotivation.com/through-the-fireConnect:Connect with Rick: https://linktr.ee/mrrickjordanConnect with Nick: https://www.stridemotivation.com/ Subscribe & Review to ALL IN with Rick Jordan on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/RickJordanALLINAbout Nick: After being thrown out of a Las Vegas hotel in a drunken haze, jeopardizing his career and relationships, Nick Klingensmith had to make a change. A 4-time cancer survivor, type-1 diabetic, and recovering alcoholic with herniated discs, nerve damage and sleep apnea, he defies it all when he finds Obstacle Course Racing. Refusing to accept his limitations, he's completed over 100 Spartan Races, 6 Major Marathons, several Ultras and scores of other obstacle and endurance events. As someone who has walked the path of a sales professional, Nick is an expert in propelling other achievement-driven professionals and leaders to overcome fear and rejection and push past self-limiting doubts, by inspiring them to take purposeful action towards their goals.
This episode explores the evolution of training strategies in obstacle course racing, highlighting the shift from casual fun runs to sophisticated competitive approaches. With insights from expert coach Dave Peters, we discuss the importance of balancing enjoyment and technical skill in training, the need for self-assessment, and the role of mental resilience for success in OCR.• Evolution of training methods in OCR • Importance of fun and community in training • The necessity of self-assessment and benchmarking • Strategies for effective skill sharpening before races • The psychological aspects of competing and personal growthSupport the show
Today's Conversation with our returning guest, Nick Klingensmith, gives us a motivational episode about achieving personal and professional goals in freight! Nick highlights the significance of breaking down larger ambitions into manageable daily tasks, building supportive systems and habits, focusing on one key task at a time, fostering long-term success, and enhancing overall well-being and productivity! About Nick Klingensmith After being thrown out of a Las Vegas hotel in a drunken haze, jeopardizing his career and relations, Nick had to make a change. A 4-time cancer survivor, type-I diabetic, recovering alcoholic with herniated discs, nerve damage and sleep apnea, he defies it all when he finds Obstacle Course Racing. Refusing to accept his limitations, he's completed over 100 Spartan Races, 6 Major Marathons, several Ultras, and scores of other obstacle and endurance events. As someone who has walked the path of a sales professional, Nick is an expert in propelling other achievement-driven professionals and leaders to overcome fear and rejection and push past self-limiting doubts, by inspiring them to take purposeful action towards their goals. Nick is a raw and passionate storyteller who holds nothing back when revealing who he used to be and the person he is now. A true testament to the power of resilience, with an unwavering belief in his purpose to overcome obstacles and inspire others to do the same, Nick delivers powerful and transformative speeches, drawing from personal experiences to illustrate the extraordinary potential of pushing through adversity. Nick's books on Amazon: Selling, Inspired!: A Mental Endurance Guide For Enduring Sales Performance THROUGH THE FIRE : The story of the 4-time cancer survivor, type-1 diabetic, and recovering alcoholic who became an obstacle course racer and defied it all. Connect with Nick Website: https://www.stridemotivation.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nklingensmith/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100069207242260 Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOiV2sNB3g4meufvBg3a9sA TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@stridemotivation?lang=en Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/stridemotivation/
Nick Klingensmith and Joe Lynch discuss the logistics of success: a mindset for unstoppable growth. Nick is the Founder and CEO of Stride Motivation, a company dedicated to transforming lives through inspiring keynote speeches and mindset coaching. Nick is an expert at helping achievement-driven professionals and leaders to overcome fear and rejection and push past self-limiting doubts. About Nick Klingensmith After being thrown out of a Las Vegas hotel in a drunken haze, jeopardizing his career and relationships, Nick Klingensmith had to make a change. A 4-time cancer survivor, type-1 diabetic, recovering alcoholic with herniated discs, nerve damage and sleep apnea, he defies it all when he finds Obstacle Course Racing. Refusing to accept his limitations, he's completed over 100 Spartan Races, 6 Major Marathons, several Ultras and scores of other obstacle and endurance events. As someone who has walked the path of a sales professional, Nick is an expert in propelling other achievement-driven professionals and leaders to overcome fear and rejection and push past self-limiting doubts, by inspiring them to take purposeful action towards their goals. Nick is a raw and passionate storyteller who holds nothing back when revealing who he used to be and the person he is now. About Stride Motivation Stride Motivation, LLC is a dynamic company dedicated to transforming lives through inspiring keynote speeches and mindset coaching. Rooted in the inspiring journey of overcoming significant health challenges and personal struggles, the company serves as a beacon for achievement-driven professionals and leaders. Through compelling storytelling drawn from the world of endurance racing, Stride Motivation empowers individuals to conquer fear, rejection, and self-limiting doubts. Specializing in coaching sales teams and remote professionals, the company imparts valuable insights on developing a resilient mindset for success. Stride Motivation is not just a company; it's a catalyst for helping others discover their inner strength, reach their goals, and become the best version of themselves. Key Takeaways: The Logistics of Success: A Mindset for Unstoppable Growth Nick Klingensmith and Joe Lynch discuss the logistics of success: a mindset for unstoppable growth. Nick is the Founder and CEO of Stride Motivation, a company dedicated to transforming lives through inspiring keynote speeches and mindset coaching. Nick is an expert at helping achievement-driven professionals and leaders to overcome fear and rejection and push past self-limiting doubts. Transformational Focus: Stride Motivation is dedicated to transforming lives through impactful keynote speeches and mindset coaching. Inspirational Leadership: The company is led by Nick Klingensmith, a passionate storyteller and four-time cancer survivor who shares his experiences to inspire others. Target Audience: It primarily targets achievement-driven professionals, helping them to overcome fears and self-limiting doubts. Coaching Emphasis: The coaching provided by Stride Motivation focuses on resilience, personal growth, and embracing one's purpose. Goal Pursuit: Stride Motivation aids individuals in pursuing their personal and professional goals. Engaging Approach: The company uses engaging storytelling techniques to connect with the audience during speeches and coaching sessions. Mindset Transformation: The emphasis is placed on changing mindsets to foster positive thinking and encourage actionable steps towards self-improvement. Learn More About The Logistics of Success: A Mindset for Unstoppable Growth Nick Klingensmith | Linkedin Stride Motivation | Linkedin Stride Motivation | Website Instagram: @stridemotivation TikTok: @stridemotivation Twitter: @stridemotivatio YouTube: @stridemotivation Threads: @stridemotivation Email: Booking@stridemotivation.com Selling, Inspired! A Mental Endurance Guide For Enduring Sales Performance THROUGH THE FIRE : The story of the 4-time cancer survivor, type-1 diabetic, and recovering alcoholic who became an obstacle course racer and defied it all Becoming a Better Salesperson with Nick Klingensmith Building Resilient Sales Teams with Nick Klingensmith The Logistics of Logistics Podcast If you enjoy the podcast, please leave a positive review, subscribe, and share it with your friends and colleagues. The Logistics of Logistics Podcast: Google, Apple, Castbox, Spotify, Stitcher, PlayerFM, Tunein, Podbean, Owltail, Libsyn, Overcast Check out The Logistics of Logistics on Youtube
Things get muddy, as Cristina Lutcan joins us to talk about her love for obstacle course racing. She recounts how a military camp gifted by her parents introduced her to crawling in the mud and climbing ropes. Over the years, Cristina embraced both the Tough Mudder's community-focused, non-competitive nature, where fun and teamwork are central, and Spartan races that push her limits and emphasize upper body strength, intense terrain, and individual endurance. She describes obstacles such as cold water plunges and mild electric shocks, and reflects on the inner resilience needed to push through moments of doubt. Plus, she adds tips and words of motivation for those considering their first race.Guest BioCristina Lutcan (she/her) is a seasoned UX Designer and community builder with a passion for design, community, and entrepreneurship. Her diverse experience includes projects with startups and large corporations, including recent roles at Slack and TELUS Digital. As the founder of UX Design Talk, one of the largest design communities in Toronto, she has empowered hundreds of designers to gain practical skills in a collaborative environment. Cristina also hosts the UX Curious Podcast, where she dives into the applications of UX across various industries.LinksCristina's website: https://cristinaux.framer.website/Cristina on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/cristinalutcan/CreditsCover design by Raquel Breternitz.
This episode explores the rise of hybrid athletes, discussing what defines a hybrid athlete compared to an obstacle course racer. We delve into the historical context of hybrid training, its accessibility, and the societal perceptions that shape this fitness trend. • Defining characteristics of hybrid athletes versus OCR athletes • Historical roots of hybrid training and its evolution • The role of social media in popularising hybrid training • Accessibility of hybrid training compared to traditional sports • Societal perceptions of multi-disciplinary approaches in fitness www.accountabilitycorner.com Follow along on Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/_accountabilitycorner/Support the show
What if the festive season didn't have to derail your obstacle course racing training? Join Morgan, Chris, and Darren in this special 40th episode of the Accountability Corner as we confront the unique challenges of staying motivated during the holidays. With Chris in search of inspiration and Morgan sharing positive vibes from Sheffield, we tackle the real-world struggle of balancing social obligations and dwindling daylight against the backdrop of no imminent races. Discover strategies to keep yourself accountable while still enjoying the season's gatherings and festivities.Listen as we dive into the importance of rest and adjusting training schedules to prevent burnout. We debunk the myth that a busy work schedule means non-stop training, stressing the value of micro-adjustments and well-timed breaks. Our conversation sheds light on how to set and focus on specific goals without overloading yourself, and why taking a step back can sometimes be the key to moving forward in your fitness journey. We share insights on the fine line between using fitness tracking devices as helpful guides versus letting them dictate every decision, and how to avoid the holiday trap of overtraining that can sap your motivation for the new year.Finally, we explore the power of shaking up your environment and routine to maintain motivation and accountability in training. Whether it's joining a new club, relocating, or simply rethinking your race calendar, these shifts can rejuvenate your workouts. We also discuss the realities of aging as athletes, and how to integrate necessary recovery into your training. With a focus on consistency and planning, especially during the holiday period, we share personal experiences and future plans, offering a motivational boost to keep your athletic performance in check.Support the show
Welcome to another edition of the OCR Underground Show. Your best training resource for Obstacle Course Racing. I am getting ready to head up to San Luis Obispo this weekend for the Spartan Beast. In fact I am teaching the OS course on Friday 11/1. If you are in the area and want to come play on the obstacles click here to register. In this episode I share some information on creatine. Creatine is one of the most studied supplements on the market. Yet there is still a ton of misconceptions and misinformation on the product. Unfortunately many companies using marketing tactics to make their brand seem more effective. Is it all true? I share some great resources to help you understand what exactly you should be concerned with or not when taking creatine. Recently I had to overcome a significant muscle injury. It came up in the middle of my Beast training which was not ideal. Luckily I did a few things to help me bounce back as quickly as possible. I didn't even have to miss a softball game which was great. While recovering from any injury takes time, there are things we can do to control how long that time is. In this episode I share my strategy that helped me overcome this injury and get back to my training in just a few weeks. Enjoy the show! Links Mentioned In The Show: Certified OCR Specialist: Certified OCR Specialist The Body Pod: https://myhumehealth.com/?bg_ref=OmkL9jt7FG Use code OCRUNDERGROUND Creatine Study 1: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9761713/ Creatine Study 2: https://jissn.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12970-021-00412-w Compex: https://www.compex.com/ Flex Wheel: https://flexmvmtfitness.com/shop/flex-disc-mini-rollers-set-of-2/ Amino Co: https://www.aminoco.com/?rfsn=6963296.dce6fa Use Code OCRUNDERGROUND
Send us a text#120 - How do you find strength, confidence, and joy in your fitness journey? Join Kayla Cittadino, 2x American Ninja Warrior, DEKA World Championship contender, and Podcast Host, and me as she shares her inspiring transformation. From losing 75 pounds to becoming a top athlete, Kayla dives into how hybrid racing has helped her build resilience, both mentally and physically. As a coach, she empowers others to embrace challenges, focus on personal growth, and discover the joy in running and DEKA events. Join us for an uplifting conversation on unlocking your potential.Topics Covered:How hybrid racing builds both mental resilience and physical strength.Discovering joy in running and DEKA through embracing new challenges.Kayla's coaching philosophy: empowering athletes to focus on growth and confidence.Today's GuestKayla CittadinoKayla turned her life around in 2018 after making the decision to return to a healthier lifestyle. What started off as a 75lbs weight loss journey turned into becoming a 2x American Ninja Warrior, Spartan OCR Athlete, a DEKA World Championship Competitor, and Podcast Host of her mindset-based podcast Taco About It Tuesday.Follow Kayla Cittadino:Instagram - @kaylacittadinoPodcast - Taco About It TuesdayYouTube - @kaylacittadino6311Resources:Inspire to Run on Instagram - @inspiretorunpodcastFree Guide - Kickstart your Fitness in 5 Steps8 Week Fitness Coaching Program with Underdog FitnessSign-up using code INSPIRE10 for 10% off Rate, Review, & Follow on Apple Podcasts“Inspire to Run Podcast is truly inspiring!”
Having to face a cascade of challenges would daunt even the most determined individuals. Rather than being defined by these trials, Nick Klingensmith has used them as stepping stones to a remarkable transformation. Nick has overcome significant challenges in his life, including being a four-time cancer survivor, type 1 diabetic, recovering alcoholic, and having experienced multiple car accidents. Nick Klingensmith's story is a powerful reminder of the importance of resilience, mindset, and personal transformation. In this episode of Life in Transition, he shares his insights into overcoming challenges and, staying motivated. His path to transformation has been fueled by his dedication to physical activity, particularly adventure obstacle racing, which has helped him break through self-imposed limits and rediscover his purpose.His story is an inspiring example of the human spirit's ability to overcome adversity and thrive. Nick's message is one of hope, resilience, and the power of intentional action.In this episode, we'll talk about:Adversities that Nick Klingensmith had to overcome at a young ageAdventure racing as a catalyst of self-rediscoveryBenefits of physical activities like racingOvercoming the victim mindsetRecognizing self-doubtWeighing the impact of action and inactionSome actions to take when in adversityConnect with Nick Klingensmith :WebsiteInstagramFacebookLinkedInTiktokMentioned on the Show:First Book of Nick Klingensmith Through the FireLet's connect! Follow us on social media for a daily dose of inspiration, updates, and behind-the-scenes moments.FacebookInstagramXLinkedInYouTubeExplore our website for more in-depth information, resources, and to download the 8-step guide to mastering mid-life transitions.My new book PURPOSEFUL LIVING is out now. Order it now: https://a.co/d/cJKOpo6The views and opinions expressed on the Life In Transition podcast are solely those of the author and guests and should not be attributed to any other individual or entity. This podcast is an independent production of Life In Transition, and the podcast production is an original work of the author. All rights of ownership and reproduction are retained—copyright 2024.
Many of us going through menopause at the moment were the latchkey kids of Generation X, who came of age without a whole lot of supervision and (though it certainly wasn't all bad!), more than our share of angst, body image issues, eating disorders, and cultural BS about how women were supposed to look and behave. It wasn't always easy, but it also taught us how to fend for ourselves, be resilient, and forge our own way–qualities that are very helpful as we navigate the menopause transition and beyond. This week's guest, Jody Trostler, owner of Just Train, has been through all of it and is committed to helping women get fit and strong, find their power, advocate for themselves, and be the best version of themselves right now. She also walks her talk, competing in her first CrossFit event at age 48, and is still hitting PRs in the weight room at 55.Jody Trostler, owner of Just Train Personal Training, is a Certified Personal Trainer and Group Fitness Instructor, Certified Online Coach and Master Health Coach and has completed Stacy Sims Menopause For Athletes course. Her practice features a 16-week Online Group program called Ignite the Fire! for women entering their perimenopause years and beyond. Her current personal fitness passion is Obstacle Course Racing and trail running with friends and her dog Charlie. You can learn more about her and her work at justtrain.net.Subscribe to the Feisty 40+ newsletter: https://feistymedia.ac-page.com/feisty-40-sign-up-page Feisty Menopause Performance Retreat: Join us from November 21st-23rd, 2024 https://www.feistymenopause.com/retreat Join the FREE Women's Sports Fan Club: fanclub.feisty.co Follow Us on Instagram:Feisty Menopause: @feistymenopause Hit Play Not Pause Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/807943973376099 Join Level Up:https://www.feistymenopause.com/monthly-membership-1 Support our Partners:Previnex: Get 15% off your first order with code HITPLAY at https://www.previnex.com/ Midi Health: You Deserve to Feel Great. Book your virtual visit today at https://www.joinmidi.com/ Tifosi Optics: Use code FM20! for 20% off at https://tifosioptics.com/ Lagoon Sleep: Go to LagoonSleep.com/hitplay and take the 2 minute sleep quiz to find your match, and then use the code HITPLAY for 15% off your first purchase This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis: Podscribe - https://podscribe.com/privacyPodcorn - https://podcorn.com/privacySpotify Ad Analytics - https://www.spotify.com/us/legal/ad-analytics-privacy-policy/Chartable - https://chartable.com/privacy
Nick Klingensmith and Joe Lynch discuss building resilient sales teams . Nick is the Founder and CEO of Stride Motivation, a company dedicated to transforming lives through inspiring keynote speeches and mindset coaching. Nick is an expert at helping achievement-driven professionals and leaders to overcome fear and rejection and push past self-limiting doubts. Summary: Building Resilient Sales Teams Nick Klingensmith is an obstacle course racer, motivational speaker, and mindset coach whose company Stride Motivation helps high achievers set and accomplish meaningful goals. Drawing from his own experiences overcoming cancer, diabetes, and alcoholism, Nick shares invaluable wisdom on building resilient sales teams. Nick delves into strategies for fostering a strong team identity and aligning individual passions with a shared purpose. Nick also discusses the importance of consistent prospecting, effective communication, and breaking down lofty objectives into manageable action steps. Get ready for an inspiring conversation packed with practical advice on developing the mental resilience and endurance needed to sustain peak sales performance. #SalesResilience #PurposeOverProfits #CommunicationIsKey About Nick Klingensmith After being thrown out of a Las Vegas hotel in a drunken haze, jeopardizing his career and relationships, Nick Klingensmith had to make a change. A 4-time cancer survivor, type-1 diabetic, recovering alcoholic with herniated discs, nerve damage and sleep apnea, he defies it all when he finds Obstacle Course Racing. Refusing to accept his limitations, he's completed over 100 Spartan Races, 6 Major Marathons, several Ultras and scores of other obstacle and endurance events. As someone who has walked the path of a sales professional, Nick is an expert in propelling other achievement-driven professionals and leaders to overcome fear and rejection and push past self-limiting doubts, by inspiring them to take purposeful action towards their goals. Nick is a raw and passionate storyteller who holds nothing back when revealing who he used to be and the person he is now. About Stride Motivation Stride Motivation, LLC is a dynamic company dedicated to transforming lives through inspiring keynote speeches and mindset coaching. Rooted in the inspiring journey of overcoming significant health challenges and personal struggles, the company serves as a beacon for achievement-driven professionals and leaders. Through compelling storytelling drawn from the world of endurance racing, Stride Motivation empowers individuals to conquer fear, rejection, and self-limiting doubts. Specializing in coaching sales teams and remote professionals, the company imparts valuable insights on developing a resilient mindset for success. Stride Motivation is not just a company; it's a catalyst for helping others discover their inner strength, reach their goals, and become the best version of themselves. Key Takeaways: Building Resilient Sales Teams Nick share his strategies for creating robust, adaptable sales forces. Overcoming challenges through perseverance and mindset coaching. Understanding the importance of logistics and supply chain management. Developing mental resilience and endurance for sustained performance. Aligning individual and team goals for motivation and engagement. Fostering communication, goal setting, and prospecting habits. Timestamps (00:00:02) Today's Topic: Building Resilient Sales Teams (00:00:24) Stride Motivation and Nick Klingensmith (00:00:56) Logistics Sales Challenges (00:05:15) Trimble Insight Conference 2024 (00:08:09) Nick's Background and Career Highlights (00:10:23) Four-time Cancer Survivor's Journey (00:16:27) Pursuing Better Habits Through Challenges (00:22:18) Building Resilient Teams: Identity and Purpose (00:22:51) Nick's Marathon and Charity Endeavors (00:25:17) "Selling Inspired" Book Overview (00:29:08) Understanding Team Members' Driving Forces (00:32:24) Aligning Professional and Personal Goals (00:36:29) Purpose: Overcoming Obstacles and Inspiring Others (00:39:37) Empowering Sales Managers with Communication (00:42:42) Six Essential Team Meetings (00:45:18) Goal Setting for Resilient Sales Teams (00:50:51) Importance of Prospecting and Relationships (00:54:45) Recap: Building Resilient Sales Teams (00:56:26) Working with Individuals and Speaking at Conferences Learn More About Becoming a Better Salesperson Nick Klingensmith | Linkedin Stride Motivation | Linkedin Stride Motivation | Website Instagram: @stridemotivation TikTok: @stridemotivation Twitter: @stridemotivatio YouTube: @stridemotivation Threads: @stridemotivation Email: Booking@stridemotivation.com Selling, Inspired! A Mental Endurance Guide For Enduring Sales Performance THROUGH THE FIRE : The story of the 4-time cancer survivor, type-1 diabetic, and recovering alcoholic who became an obstacle course racer and defied it all Becoming a Better Salesperson with Nick Klingensmith | The Logistics of Logistics Episode Sponsor: Trimble Transportion 2024 Insight Tech Conference Revolutionizing the Road: Trimble's Tech Solutions with Kelly Williams | The Logistics of Logistics The Logistics of Logistics Podcast If you enjoy the podcast, please leave a positive review, subscribe, and share it with your friends and colleagues. The Logistics of Logistics Podcast: Google, Apple, Castbox, Spotify, Stitcher, PlayerFM, Tunein, Podbean, Owltail, Libsyn, Overcast Check out The Logistics of Logistics on Youtube
Listen to this meaningful conversation about resilience and personal growth with today's guest, Nick Klingensmith! This episode covers Nick's remarkable journey as a cancer survivor, the intersection of fitness and business, the importance of personal branding, and the ‘marathon mindset' necessary for long-term relationships in business development! About Nick Klingensmith After being thrown out of a Las Vegas hotel in a drunken haze, jeopardizing his career and relations, Nick had to make a change. A 4-time cancer survivor, type-I diabetic, recovering alcoholic with herniated discs, nerve damage and sleep apnea, he defies it all when he finds Obstacle Course Racing. Refusing to accept his limitations, he's completed over 100 Spartan Races, 6 Major Marathons, several Ultras, and scores of other obstacle and endurance events. As someone who has walked the path of a sales professional, Nick is an expert in propelling other achievement-driven professionals and leaders to overcome fear and rejection and push past self-limiting doubts, by inspiring them to take purposeful action towards their goals. Nick is a raw and passionate storyteller who holds nothing back when revealing who he used to be and the person he is now. A true testament to the power of resilience, with an unwavering belief in his purpose to overcome obstacles and inspire others to do the same, Nick delivers powerful and transformative speeches, drawing from personal experiences to illustrate the extraordinary potential of pushing through adversity. Nick's books on Amazon: Selling, Inspired!: A Mental Endurance Guide For Enduring Sales Performance THROUGH THE FIRE : The story of the 4-time cancer survivor, type-1 diabetic, and recovering alcoholic who became an obstacle course racer and defied it all. Connect with Nick Website: https://www.stridemotivation.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nklingensmith/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100069207242260 Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOiV2sNB3g4meufvBg3a9sA TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@stridemotivation?lang=en Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/stridemotivation/
“First time I had cancer, I was scared. Second time, I was mad. Third time, I was relieved. I can drink what I want. Who wants to mess with a guy who has inoperable cancer?” Nick's resume reads like a work of fiction: Four-time cancer survivor. Motivational speaker. Arrested in Vegas for having sex with a hooker. But what's truly fascinating about Nick's story is how it mirrors the experiences of so many others—the universal quest for belonging, security, and love, juxtaposed with the desire to feel unique and special, which often creates a profound sense of separation. In today's episode, we explore: Terminal Uniqueness: How we use our perceived uniqueness to justify our actions and create separation, which can fuel addiction. The 'Me Against the World' Attitude: Why this mindset is a losing battle, given that someone loses and the world has been around for thousands of years. The Illusion of Strength: How building emotional armor might project power but often masks a victim mindset. Sobriety as a Daily Goal: Nick's number one goal each year is to stay sober. Even after 10 years of sobriety, he starts every morning with that intention. Remorse vs. Shame: Understanding the difference and how Nick holds no shame for his past actions, as he no longer identifies with that person. And let's give a shoutout to Nick, who celebrates 10 years sober on July 14th! About Nick After being thrown out of a Las Vegas hotel in a drunken haze, jeopardizing his career and relationships, Nick Klingensmith had to make a change. A 4-time cancer survivor, type-1 diabetic, recovering alcoholic with herniated discs, nerve damage and sleep apnea, he defies it all when he finds Obstacle Course Racing. Refusing to accept his limitations, he's completed over 100 Spartan Races, 6 Major Marathons, several Ultras and scores of other obstacle and endurance events. To learn more about Nick, visit https://www.stridemotivation.com/. About Sober•ish Uprising At Sober•ish Uprising we find freedom from alcohol on our own terms. Founded by Holly Krivokapich, a former heavy drinker who started a sober•ish uprising of her own and everything changed, we know it's not about saying no to the drink but saying yes to you. Holly works with 40ish, personal development junkies who are ready to put their sober curiosity into action, making it their next power move, and doing so with all the fun and none of the dread. Through our podcast, 1:1 coaching and her signature program The Sober•ish Experiment, we support those to create and live their own sober•ish journey. www.soberishuprising.com
Welcome to another episode of the OCR Underground Show. Each episode is packed with training and nutrition tips to help you train for your next obstacle course race without destroying your body in the process. I am super excited to announce the release of my latest project. This one has been in the works for over a year and I am finally ready to share it. On top of being a coach and business owner, I have been a fitness educator for a long time. It is something that I have really enjoyed. I love learning and keeping up with my education and I love helping others get better at their craft. Over the years of working with OCR clients, I have learned much to see what it takes to make improvements. I have had successes and mistakes. But each time I learned and developed a better and better system to helping my clients. There are not many programs out there that really go in depth on the science and application of training for OCR. My goal was to put together a certification course for other coaches looking to sharpen their craft and better help their clients in the sport of OCR. Whether they are training for their first one or trying to podium, there are specific things to work on, to help with your success. Whether you are a coach or not, this episode takes you though what it takes to create a successful OCR training program. If you are looking to improve your own program, or the programs of clients you are working with, check this out. This new course is 7 modules packed with applicable information to help you take your clients results to the next level. These modules include: Module 1 - Recovery Methods Module 2 - Energy Systems Development Module 3 - Nutrition Module 4 - Strength Training Module 5 - Tactical Skill Development Module 6 - Effective Programming Module 7 - Mental Training Strategies No other program goes into this much depth in these topics specifically for OCR. There are over 13 hours of video lecture plus a 127 page manual. If you are ready to step up your coaching or learn more to help with your own training click on the link below. I am lo0king for 10 beta testers to complete the program and be the first Certified OCR Specialists. As an added bonus you will receive $100 off when you use code COCRS100. https://ocr-underground.newzenler.com/courses/certified-ocr-specialist Enjoy the episode! Links Mentioned In The Show: The Body Pod Scale: https://myhumehealth.com/products/the-body-pod?bg_ref=OmkL9jt7FG Use Code OCRUNDERGROUND to save 15% The Ice Pod Pro: https://snwbl.io/pod-company/MIKE17290 Save $10 with this link The Certified OCR Specialist: https://ocr-underground.newzenler.com/courses/certified-ocr-specialist Save $100 with Code COCRS100
Send us a Text Message.#116 - Looking for a way to break the monotony of road races? Try DEKA races! It's a game-changer for strength, conditioning, and mental toughness. Hybrid racing is revolutionizing the running world, and this episode promises to show you how. Learn why DEKA races could be the key to unlocking your running potential through unique cross-training opportunities. I'll share personal anecdotes from back-to-back race weekends and reflect on how these hybrid races have become a key part of my training. Topics Covered:Hear why I started running DEKA racesLearn some of the key benefits of running DEKA racesListen to my recent race experiences in back-to-back race weekendsResources:Inspire to Run on Instagram - @inspiretorunpodcastFree Guide - Kickstart your Fitness in 5 Steps8 Week Fitness Coaching Program with Underdog FitnessSign-up using code INSPIRE10 for 10% off Rate, Review, & Follow on Apple Podcasts“Inspire to Run Podcast is truly inspiring!”
In this episode of the Over 50 Health and Wellness Show, host Kevin English interviews Gwendolyn Bounds, an award-winning journalist and author, on her inspirational journey from being the last pick in childhood sports to excelling in midlife obstacle course racing. Wendy discusses overcoming childhood insecurities, midlife challenges, and the significance of both mental and physical fitness. The conversation covers personalized fitness, the power of self-experimentation, and engaging in activities like Spartan racing to enhance health and self-discovery. Wendy also presents her new book, 'It's Not Too Late: The Power of Pushing Limits at Any Age,' emphasizing the value of small, consistent healthy choices over quick fixes. TIME STAMPS:01:06 Introducing Wendy Bounds: From Sedentary to Superwoman02:52 Wendy's Childhood and Athletic Insecurities04:40 Impact of Childhood Experiences on Adulthood08:47 Overcoming Limiting Beliefs and Imposter Syndrome12:35 The Competency Trap and Growth Mindset17:33 Catalysts for Change in Midlife26:18 The Midlife Assassin: Breaking the Cycle of Sameness30:06 The Importance of Physical Fitness in Aging37:14 Traveling Challenges and Fitness Motivation38:30 The Expanding World of Fitness39:10 Introduction to OCR and Spartan Races40:39 What is OCR?45:37 Training for OCR: Practical Tips50:37 The Role of Burpees in Spartan Races53:02 Metaphors for Life: Obstacles in OCR58:31 Fueling Your Fitness Journey01:04:33 The Importance of Personalized Health Choices01:11:54 Conclusion and Final Thoughts Connect with Wendy:Web | gwendolynbounds.com Instagram | @gboundsLinkedin | /gwendolynboundsTwitter | @gwendolynbounds Book: Not Too Late: The Power of Pushing Limits at Any Age Subscribe & Review:Are you subscribed to The Over 50 Health & Wellness Show? If not, I'd love for you to do that today so you don't miss any future episodes. I'd also be grateful if you left a review on iTunes. Your reviews help others find the podcast and get the support they need on their health journey. Want to rewrite the narrative of your life and health? Visit the link below to see if our 1:1 coaching services are a perfect fit for your long term goals: https://calendly.com/thesilveredge/coaching-inquiry Want more over 50 health and wellness goodness? Check out our private Facebook group:https://www.facebook.com/groups/silveredgefitnessWant to rewrite the narrative of your life and health? Visit the link below to see if our 1:1 coaching services are a perfect fit for your long term goals: https://calendly.com/thesilveredge/coaching-inquiry Want more over 50 health and wellness goodness? Check out our private Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/silveredgefitness
#115 - Ready to meet an inspiring athlete who turned her life around through sheer determination and a powerful mindset? Kayla Cittadino, host of Taco About It Tuesday podcast, shares her story of transformation—from struggling with weight and a toxic relationship to becoming an elite athlete and a two-time American Ninja Warrior competitor. This episode is a masterclass in making positive changes and overcoming the mental and physical obstacles that hold us back. Kayla opens up about the pivotal moments that sparked her lifestyle overhaul, starting with small, incremental steps in nutrition and fitness. This conversation is a testament to the transformative power of resilience and the importance of a supportive coach and community.Topics Covered:Learn practical tips for making positive changes and overcoming mental and physical obstaclesUnderstand why a champion mindset is necessary to conquer fear, set personal goals, and build a positive relationship with yourselfDiscover insights on how self-talk and visual affirmations can keep you motivated and moving toward your goalToday's GuestKayla CittadinoKayla turned her life around in 2018 after making the decision to return to a healthier lifestyle. What started off as a 75lbs weight loss journey turned into becoming a 2x American Ninja Warrior, Spartan OCR Athlete, a DEKA World Championship Competitor and Podcast Host of her mindset based podcast Taco About It Tuesday. Follow Kayla:Instagram - @kaylacittadinoPodcast - Taco About It TuesdayResources:Inspire to Run on Instagram - @inspiretorunpodcastFree Guide - Kickstart your Fitness in 5 Steps8 Week Fitness Coaching Program with Underdog FitnessSign-up using code INSPIRE10 for 10% off Rate, Review, & Follow on Apple Podcasts“Inspire to Run Podcast is truly inspiring!”
After being thrown out of a Las Vegas hotel in a drunken haze, jeopardizing his career and relationships, Nick Klingensmith had to make a change. A 4-time cancer survivor, type-1 diabetic, recovering alcoholic with herniated discs, nerve damage and sleep apnea, he defies it all when he finds Obstacle Course Racing. Refusing to accept his limitations, he's completed over 100 Spartan Races, 6 Major Marathons, several Ultras and scores of other obstacle and endurance events. Enjoy The Village Vision Podcast and connect with Nick at StrideMotivation.com and on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, TikTok and YouTube. Dr. Crystal Morrison is a highly regarded executive advisor, strategist, leader, scientist, tech entrepreneur dedicated to improving outcomes for children with special needs by building collaboration and communication among adults providing care. She create the Village Vision podcast to celebrate their stories and ignite action. Follow at TheVillageVision.com and on Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn and YouTube. WordofMomRadio.com
After being thrown out of a Las Vegas hotel in a drunken haze, jeopardizing his career and relationships, Nick Klingensmith had to make a change. A 4-time cancer survivor, type-1 diabetic, recovering alcoholic with herniated discs, nerve damage and sleep apnea, he defies it all when he finds Obstacle Course Racing. Refusing to accept his limitations, he's completed over 100 Spartan Races, 6 Major Marathons, several Ultras and scores of other obstacle and endurance events. As someone who has walked the path of a sales professional, Nick is an expert in propelling other achievement-driven professionals and leaders to overcome fear and rejection and push past self-limiting doubts, by inspiring them to take purposeful action towards their goals. Nick is a raw and passionate storyteller who holds nothing back when revealing who he used to be and the person he is now. Nick's Website: Home | Stride Motivation L From James: FREE Passive Income Masterclass (profityourknowledge.com)
I'm your host, Rick Jordan, and joining us is Nick Klingensmith, a four-time cancer survivor, type 1 diabetic, recovering alcoholic, and an avid obstacle course racer. Nick shares his awe-inspiring journey of overcoming life's toughest challenges, from battling cancer multiple times to tackling some of the world's toughest obstacle races. Hear how Nick transformed his life through sheer determination and a positive mindset, even when faced with extreme adversity. This episode is a powerful reminder of the human spirit's capacity to triumph over trials and an encouragement for anyone facing their own obstacles.#RickJordan #Podcast #SpartanRacesWe Meet: Nick Klingensmith, Stride Motivation, LLCEpisode References: Connect:Connect with Rick: https://linktr.ee/mrrickjordanConnect with Nick: Universal Rate & Review: https://lovethepodcast.com/allinwithrickjordanSubscribe & Review to ALL IN with Rick Jordan on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/RickJordanALLINAbout Nick: After being thrown out of a Las Vegas hotel in a drunken haze, jeopardizing his career and relationships, Nick Klingensmith had to make a change. A 4-time cancer survivor, type-1 diabetic, and recovering alcoholic with herniated discs, nerve damage and sleep apnea, he defies it all when he finds Obstacle Course Racing. Refusing to accept his limitations, he's completed over 100 Spartan Races, 6 Major Marathons, several Ultras and scores of other obstacle and endurance events. As someone who has walked the path of a sales professional, Nick is an expert in propelling other achievement-driven professionals and leaders to overcome fear and rejection and push past self-limiting doubts, by inspiring them to take purposeful action towards their goals.
Have you ever thought of doing an obstacle course race? Even if not, don't go anywhere! This is a great episode with Aaron and Dana of Race Ready Obstacles about their journey to business ownership and starting their own race event. It's a great story of following the signs of your life and taking the next best step. Race Ready Obstacles - https://racereadyobstacles.com/ Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/racereadyobstacles/ Midwest Ocr - https://www.midwestocr.com/ Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/themidwestocr/ Connect on my newsletter https://lindsey-heiserman.ck.page/20f36acc3b Life Adventure Collective https://lindseyheiserman.com/lifeadventurecollective/ 1-1 Life Coaching https://lindseyheiserman.com/life-coaching/ True Self Care Mini Course https://lindseyheiserman.podia.com/true-self-care Speaking https://lindseyheiserman.com/speaking/ Email lindsey@lindseyheiserman.com
Welcome to the Business Growth Trailblazers Podcast! In this episode, we dig into the benefits of shrugging off the idea of comfort. After being thrown out of a Las Vegas hotel in a drunken haze, jeopardizing his career and relationships, Nick Klingensmith had to make a change. A 4-time cancer survivor, type-1 diabetic, recovering alcoholic with herniated discs, nerve damage and sleep apnea, he defies it all when he finds Obstacle Course Racing. Refusing to accept his limitations, he's completed over 100 Spartan Races, 6 Major Marathons, several Ultras and scores of other obstacle and endurance events. As someone who has walked the path of a sales professional, Nick is an expert in propelling other achievement-driven professionals and leaders to overcome fear and rejection and push past self-limiting doubts, by inspiring them to take purposeful action towards their goals. Nick is a raw and passionate storyteller who holds nothing back when revealing who he used to be and the person he is now. Connect with Nick here: Instagram: @stridemotivation https://www.instagram.com/stridemotivation/ TikTok: @stridemotivation https://www.tiktok.com/@stridemotivation?lang=en Twitter: @stridemotivatio https://twitter.com/stridemotivatio YouTube: @stridemotivation https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOiV2sNB3g4meufvBg3a9sA Threads: @stridemotivation LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nklingensmith/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100069207242260 stridemotivation.com =================================== If you enjoyed this episode, remember to hit the like button and subscribe. Then share this episode with your friends. Thanks for watching the Personal Development Trailblazers Podcast. This podcast is part of the Digital Trailblazer family of podcasts. To learn more about Digital Trailblazer and what we do to help entrepreneurs, go to DigitalTrailblazer.com. Are you a coach, consultant, expert, or online course creator? Then we'd love to invite you to our FREE Facebook Group where you can learn the best strategies to land more high-ticket clients and customers. Request to join here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/profitablecoursecreators QUICK LINKS: APPLY TO BE FEATURED: https://app.digitaltrailblazer.com/podcast-guest-application GET MORE CLIENTS: https://app.digitaltrailblazer.com/client-acquisition-accelerator-pdf DIGITAL TRAILBLAZER: https://digitaltrailblazer.com/ JOIN OUR FREE FACEBOOK GROUP: https://www.facebook.com/groups/profitablecoursecreators
Welcome to the OCR Underground Show. Your best resource for all things to help you train better for your next obstacle course race. Each episode I cover training strategies plus chat with other experts to get other insight into smarter ocr training. In this episode I share more information about my latest project the Certified OCR Specialist certification coming out soon. To get on the waitlist for early access click here: https://ocr-underground.newzenler.com/f/certified-ocr-specialist-waitlist I also dive into some keys areas of mental training. While this seems like a secondary part of training, there is no denying how much impact the mental game has on performance. In this podcast I review the 3 areas that most will need improvements in mental training and specific strategies on improving them. In my research review, I look at the debated topic of protein intake. Specifically we look at research on the upper limit of protein consumption. Is it true that you cannot absorb more than 30g of protein in one feeding? We look at new research that provided 100g of protein and see some interesting results. I also look at some factors for protein consumption as we age. And finally, in my interview segment, I have on coaches Joel and Luke Hayes from Trio Fitness Training. Brothers Joel and Luke Hayes are personal trainers specializing in coaching athletes in Obstacle Course Racing, Hybrid Competitions, and Tactical Competitions with their company Trio Fitness Training. They've been racing in OCR competitively since 2017, and since the more recent growth of Hybrid events, they've competed in dozens of events, and coached athletes to the Deka World Championships as well as other hybrid competitions. Their specialty is tailoring training specifically to individual athletes so that the athlete is put in the best possible position to progress and succeed. They discuss some of their philosophies with training for both OCR and hybrid events. Also, they explain a really cool project they have been working on called the OCR's Greatest. This is an incredible program to bring about awareness for more local OCR events. Listen in on how you can help out local OCR races and win prizes. Links mentioned in today's episode: Dara Scale by Fit Track: http://getfittrack.com/ Use code OCRUNDERGROUND The Ice Pod Pro: podcompany.com Amino Company: www.aminoco.com/OCR Use Code OCR Research on Upper Limit Protein Intake: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666379123005402 Research on Protein in Older Adults: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30722014/ Trio Fitness Training: https://www.triofitnesstraining.com/ OCR's Greatest: https://www.triofitnesstraining.com/ocrsgreatest
We talk with Francis G. and learn all about Thieves and Beggars. This is a CrossFit style, same-sex teams of 2 competition, where you can expect a mix of Obstacle Course Racing, Strongman, and Rucking elements. Then we sit down with Colin Stiefer for the first time in a year to talk about his recent HYROX performances and much more. Explore HYROX, DEKA FIT, and other hybrid fitness trends on the Hybrid Fitness Media Podcast. Join insightful discussions with athletes, event directors, and industry insiders for valuable information and entertainment. Stay tuned for engaging content about the dynamic world of hybrid fitness! Connect & Support: Buy us some coffee with this link. Follow today's guests – Thieves and Beggars | Francis G. | Colin Stiefer Follow Hybrid Fitness Media on IG
Jonathan Albon is a 34 year old multi-discipline athlete originally from the UK, now living in Norway. Jon has left his mark on many sports including Obstacle Course Racing where he recently took home the largest prize in OCR history by crossing the line first in Saudi Arabia; completing 100 kilometres in 8 hours with 20 obstacles per 10K lap! He has some equally impressive results in trail and ultra running including top spots at OCC and CCC in recent years as well as 3rd in the short trail distance at the World Mountain and Trail Championships in Thailand in 2022. He has twice won the final ranking of Sky Extreme Series and has once been the overall winner of the Skyrunner World Series. Jon and his wife Henriette, who is also an accomplished professional trail runner, have created a training app, aptly named AlbonApp, for athletes of all levels, incorporating strength training and cardio workouts. Jon will be making his 100 miler debut without obstacles at Western States 100 this summer. Here is Jon.... You can follow Jon on Instagram here - https://www.instagram.com/jonalbon/ If you enjoyed our show please leave a rating and review. We would really appreciate it. Check out GottaRunRacing website here and use promo code GRRPODCAST for discounts - gottarunracing.com Check out our YouTube Channel here - https://youtube.com/@GottaRunRacing Check out GRR Facebook here: https://www.facebook.com/gottarunracing/ Check out GRR Instagram here: https://www.instagram.com/gottarunracing/ Check out GRR Twitter here: https://twitter.com/gottarun_racing Support us on Patreon here : https://www.patreon.com/gottarunracing
Have you ever felt paralyzed by fear? In this inspiring episode, host David Hall sits down with public speaker and life coach, Nick Klingensmith to explore the depths of overcoming obstacles and not just facing, but CHASING your fears. As we navigate through Nick's story, listeners will learn about the transformative power of pushing past life's hurdles, the importance of setting tangible goals, and the resilience required to surmount personal trauma. Whether you're looking to harness your natural strengths, or seeking a reset, or anyone in between, this conversation is bound to provide that spark of motivation you need. From Nick's brush with mortality as a 4-time cancer survivor to the adrenaline rush of Spartan races, his journey exemplifies the quiet strength we all possess. Tune in to discover how to redefine your obstacles as opportunities, build a foundation for accountability, and ultimately, become the architect of your own triumphs. Discover why embracing vulnerability can be your greatest weapon against fear, and be strong.- - -After being thrown out of a Las Vegas hotel in a drunken haze, jeopardizing his career and relationships, Nick Klingensmith had to make a change. A 4-time cancer survivor, type-1 diabetic, and recovering alcoholic with herniated discs, nerve damage and sleep apnea, he defies it all when he finds Obstacle Course Racing. Refusing to accept his limitations, he's completed over 100 Spartan Races, 6 Major Marathons, several Ultras and scores of other obstacle and endurance events. As someone who has walked the path of a sales professional, Nick is an expert in propelling other achievement-driven professionals and leaders to overcome fear and rejection and push past self-limiting doubts, by inspiring them to take purposeful action towards their goals. Nick is a raw and passionate storyteller who holds nothing back when revealing who he used to be and the person he is now.Connect with Nick:Website: StrideMotivation.comSocials: LinkedIn | Instagram | YouTube | Twitter Episode Link: Qu- - -Contact the Host of the Quiet and Strong Podcast:David Hall Author, Speaker, Educator, Podcaster quietandstrong.comGobio.link/quietandstrongdavid [at] quietandstrong.com Take the FREE Personality Assessment: Typefinder Personality Assessment Follow David on your favorite social platform: Twitter | Facebook | Instagram | LinkedIn | Youtube Get David's book:Minding Your Time: Time Management, Productivity, and Success, Especially for Introverts You may also like:Quiet & Strong Merchandise
On today's episode, I chat with Kelly Majdan. Author, speaker and wellness advisor. Kelly and I chat about her journey with obstacle course racing and its links to life and overall well-being. She discusses how the discovery of an illness in her husband led to an investment in healthier lifestyles and the pursuit of obstacle race courses. Kelly uses her experience from overcoming obstacles in races as an allegory for overcoming life challenges, leading her to write her book 'Lessons from the Obstacle Course. Five Strategies to Conquer the Muddy Fields of Life.' She touches on many important topics like the significance of having a purpose, not being afraid to fail, remaining persistent, and the potential benefits of keto and time restricted eating. Additionally, Kelly mentions her upcoming wellness program designed to help others create a strategic health plan much like a financial plan. Episode Overview: Minute 1: The Impact of Obstacle Course Racing on Kelly's Life Minute 8: The Importance of Health and Wellness in Achieving Goals Minute 16: The Power of Purpose in Overcoming Obstacles To find out more about my work, please visit Dana Williams Consulting & LinkedIn. The Strengths Journal™ guides you daily in living through your strengths to dominate each day in a way authentic to you. This system has transformed my life and the lives of my clients. Now you can get it too!
Nick Klingensmith and Joe Lynch discuss becoming a better salesperson. Nick is the Founder and CEO of Stride Motivation, a company dedicated to transforming lives through inspiring keynote speeches and mindset coaching. Nick is an expert at helping achievement-driven professionals and leaders to overcome fear and rejection and push past self-limiting doubts. About Nick Klingensmith After being thrown out of a Las Vegas hotel in a drunken haze, jeopardizing his career and relationships, Nick Klingensmith had to make a change. A 4-time cancer survivor, type-1 diabetic, recovering alcoholic with herniated discs, nerve damage and sleep apnea, he defies it all when he finds Obstacle Course Racing. Refusing to accept his limitations, he's completed over 100 Spartan Races, 6 Major Marathons, several Ultras and scores of other obstacle and endurance events. As someone who has walked the path of a sales professional, Nick is an expert in propelling other achievement-driven professionals and leaders to overcome fear and rejection and push past self-limiting doubts, by inspiring them to take purposeful action towards their goals. Nick is a raw and passionate storyteller who holds nothing back when revealing who he used to be and the person he is now. About Stride Motivation Stride Motivation, LLC is a dynamic company dedicated to transforming lives through inspiring keynote speeches and mindset coaching. Rooted in the inspiring journey of overcoming significant health challenges and personal struggles, the company serves as a beacon for achievement-driven professionals and leaders. Through compelling storytelling drawn from the world of endurance racing, Stride Motivation empowers individuals to conquer fear, rejection, and self-limiting doubts. Specializing in coaching sales teams and remote professionals, the company imparts valuable insights on developing a resilient mindset for success. Stride Motivation is not just a company; it's a catalyst for helping others discover their inner strength, reach their goals, and become the best version of themselves. Key Takeaways: Becoming a Better Salesperson Nick Klingensmith is the Founder and CEO of Stride Motivation, a company dedicated to transforming lives through inspiring keynote speeches and mindset coaching. Fueled by resilience: Founded on a real-life journey of overcoming adversity, Stride Motivation understands the grit it takes to achieve ambitious goals. Storytelling for empowerment: Drawing on the world of endurance racing, they use compelling narratives to inspire individuals to conquer fear, doubt, and rejection. Mindset coaching for teams and individuals: Specializing in sales teams and remote professionals, they offer coaching to build resilient mindsets for success in demanding environments. Transformation Beyond Business: More than just a company, Stride Motivation is a catalyst for personal growth, helping individuals unlock their potential and become the best versions of themselves. Learn More About Becoming a Better Salesperson Nick Klingensmith | Linkedin Stride Motivation | Linkedin Stride Motivation | Website Instagram: @stridemotivation TikTok: @stridemotivation Twitter: @stridemotivatio YouTube: @stridemotivation Threads: @stridemotivation Email: Booking@stridemotivation.com The Logistics of Logistics Podcast If you enjoy the podcast, please leave a positive review, subscribe, and share it with your friends and colleagues. The Logistics of Logistics Podcast: Google, Apple, Castbox, Spotify, Stitcher, PlayerFM, Tunein, Podbean, Owltail, Libsyn, Overcast Check out The Logistics of Logistics on Youtube
The OCR Underground Show Episode 107 Show Notes Welcome to the OCR Underground Show. Your best resource for all things OCR and Hybrid training. Each week I dive into different topics to help you train smarter for your next OCR. The New Year is here and what better way to start than some insight on how to set goals and a few specific things you can work on this year. Don't get caught assuming this year will be better than last. It is up to you to make that happen. This episode is jam packed with tips to help you do just that. To start I am announcing the upcoming release of my revamped Spartan Ultra Beast Training Program. This is my most downloaded program of the past few years. I revamped the workouts and added a few things to help you train for your next Ultra. While I am putting the finishing touches on the program I am running a presale promotion. Right now if you are one of the first 20 people to sign up, you get $50 off the program PLUS a free race code for your next Ultra in 2024. You just have to register by 1/31. To get access to this 4 month training plan and have all of your running, strength, and tactical workouts laid out for you click the link below. Plus get access to some cool bonuses like mental training strategies and a race day nutrition guide. Join the presale list here ======> https://ocr-underground.newzenler.com/courses/ultra-beast-training-program This episode is a New Year special. I discuss the 3 steps you should take when setting your yearly goals, how you can set a baseline to determine your current level and discover any bottlenecks in your programming, plus how to plan out your yearly training to set yourself up for success. All this and more in today's episode. Enjoy! Podcast Sponsors: Ready to start adding cold plunges to your routine? Make sure you check out The Pod Company's Ice Pod Pro. They have made cold water immersion super simple and affordable. Set it up in minutes and reap the benefits of cold exposure. Use this link and get $10 off your order. Looking for a great gift idea for fitness enthusiasts? Check out the Dara scale from Fit Track. It was voted Best Body Monitoring for Health in 2023. Get accurate measurements for 17 body composition metrics, monitor progress easily with daily & weekly health reports, and get tailored nutrition and fitness tips. The scale is 50% off right now, plus get an additional 20% off when you use code OCRUNDERGROUND. If you need help getting enough protein through your diet, check out The Amino Company. Essential Amino Acids are amino acids that your body cannot make on its own and needs to be ingested. The Amino Company created specific amino acid formulations designed to enhance workout performance, aid in exercise and injury recovery, for active aging, and liver function. Check out all of the products at www.aminoco.com/ocr. Use code OCR to save 30% on your order. Links Mentioned In The Show: Fat Loss Blueprint Webinar: http://sandiegopremiertraining.com/webinar Deka Strong at SDPT 3/3/24: https://tickets-usdk.spartan.com/event/DS948 Ultra Beast Training Program: https://ocr-underground.newzenler.com/courses/ultra-beast-training-program Find an FMS Pro near you: http://www.functionalmovement.com Broad Jump Testing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pb9t8j9ylPs Seated MB Throw Test: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GXO1eYu4kr8&pp=ygUfc2VhdGVkIG1lZGljaW5lIGJhbGwgdGhyb3cgdGVzdA%3D%3D
Welcome to the OCR Underground Show. Your best resource for smarter obstacle course race training tips. Each episode I share insight into improving your training, interview other experts, and dive into the latest research to help guide you along the way. In this episode I share my experience at the So Cal Rugged Maniac race. I had a blast getting back into a race and enjoying some time with clients. I also take a deep dive into trending recovery tool of ice baths. I have been using ice baths regularly for the past few months and have really enjoyed it. But I often cringe when I hear some of the claims that are made about what ice baths really do. Are ice baths really the best way to burn fat? Will you never get sick again? Do you bounce back faster from tough workouts? There are many reasons why you might use ice baths in your routine. In this episode we look at what the science says about popular claims like increased metabolism, enhanced recovery, dopamine release, immunity boost, pain alleviation, and improved sleep. If you currently are taking ice baths or are thinking about it, you will definitely want to check this one out. Podcast Sponsors: Ready to start adding cold plunges to your routine? Make sure you check out The Pod Company's Ice Pod Pro. They have made cold water immersion super simple and affordable. Set it up in minutes and reap the benefits of cold exposure. Use this link and get $10 off your order. Looking for a great gift idea for fitness enthusiasts? Check out the Dara scale from Fit Track. It was voted Best Body Monitoring for Health in 2023. Get accurate measurements for 17 body composition metrics, monitor progress easily with daily & weekly health reports, and get tailored nutrition and fitness tips. The scale is 50% off right now, plus get an additional 20% off when you use code OCRUNDERGROUND. If you need help getting enough protein through your diet, check out The Amino Company. Essential Amino Acids are amino acids that your body cannot make on its own and needs to be ingested. The Amino Company created specific amino acid formulations designed to enhance workout performance, aid in exercise and injury recovery, for active aging, and liver function. Check out all of the products at www.aminoco.com/ocr. Use code OCR to save 30% on your order.
Time and again, year after year, we continue to hear the unfolding of the amazing lives shared on this show, and it's always so cool when we connect with a YT listener who is finding great purpose in life and willing to share. Jayme Linker reached out a few weeks ago to introduce herself, which left our jaws on the ground. This woman is living off the front of adventure and fueling it with a purpose of service and an attitude of health and well-being for all, including herself. Jayme has been an extreme adventure athlete for over a decade, starting in Obstacle Course Racing and now a world record holder as an ocean rower. Jayme is the 1st US female to row both the Atlantic and Mid-Pacific Oceans and is working towards the next record-breaking project for the summer of 2024. Her team will become the first to embark on a circumnavigation attempt of all three oceans, starting with the Indian Ocean, then the Atlantic Ocean, and ending with the Pacific Ocean. Jayme and her teammate Owen will row for several causes, including Eating Disorder Awareness, which is close to Jayme's heart and life experience. We know that pain transmuted is fuel for a purposeful life that can serve many, and by utilizing her own battle with eating disorders, Jayme is committed to facing her fears so that others may benefit. It's an inspiring episode of one woman's great battle and the undefeatable spirit that keeps her reaching for more. In this episode, we discuss: - Jayme's journey with eating disorder - Obstacle course racing - Gathering the skills of a rower - Ocean row metrics - Trusting your teammates and your skills - Making her own food for her ocean crossings - Training on no water and little sleep - Practice eating "fear foods" so the brain will not restrict - Training for survival adventures on land - 6-8 hours training daily - One hour per week spent rowing - Logistics of rowing, fueling, and sharing space - Eating disorder awareness and raising funds - Circumnavigation of three oceans back to back to back - Dimensions and features of her ocean boat Namaste- Jess
Ariana chats with her friend Matt Davis, who created and runs Obstacle Racing Media and Hybrid Fitness Media, two of the only forms of media purely covering Obstacle Course Racing and Hybrid Fitness Events. They discuss how they've seen hybrid events develop and grow, the industry and community, and the events that have popped up with increasing regularity year after year. The two "big events" are Hyrox and Deka, but with Hybricon Games, Rally in the Valley, Go Ruck Games, 3KO, Grit Games, etc flooding the field - what kinds of athletes will we see drawn to these events? If you don't compete in any competition, can you call yourself a competitive "hybrid athlete?" How has CHP aimed to solve that with the yearly virtual competition, The Crucible? Why are most hybrid events "mostly endurance, with some strength" and what kind of athletes could we see drawn to hybrid events if they were more strength-focused? Or would that just be CrossFit? Follow Matt on Instagram and YouTube at @Obstacleracingmedia for your obstacle racing needs @HybridFitnessMediaChannel for your hybrid racing needs and buy the man a coffee! Follow CHP on Instagram @completehumanperformance