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    <title>Parkinson's: An Athlete's Journey</title>
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    <description>Parkinson’s: An Athlete’s Journey is for athletes navigating Parkinson’s, the coaches and clinicians who train them, and anyone who wants real-world strategies for performance and longevity. Hosted by Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt, the show focuses on tactical takeaways: how to train, recover, manage symptoms, and stay consistent when the rules keep changing. Expect honest conversations, tested routines, and guest experts who go deeper on what works.</description>
    <copyright>© 2026 Fitizens LLC</copyright>
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    <podcast:trailer pubdate="Tue, 20 Jan 2026 11:01:47 -0800" url="https://media.transistor.fm/f920b346/cfad7009.mp3" length="1007841" type="audio/mpeg">Parkinson's: An Athlete's Journey (Official Trailer)</podcast:trailer>
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    <pubDate>Wed, 27 May 2026 07:00:23 -0700</pubDate>
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    <link>https://www.ericvonfrohlich.com/podcast</link>
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      <title>Parkinson's: An Athlete's Journey</title>
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    <itunes:author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</itunes:author>
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    <itunes:summary>Parkinson’s: An Athlete’s Journey is for athletes navigating Parkinson’s, the coaches and clinicians who train them, and anyone who wants real-world strategies for performance and longevity. Hosted by Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt, the show focuses on tactical takeaways: how to train, recover, manage symptoms, and stay consistent when the rules keep changing. Expect honest conversations, tested routines, and guest experts who go deeper on what works.</itunes:summary>
    <itunes:subtitle>Parkinson’s: An Athlete’s Journey is for athletes navigating Parkinson’s, the coaches and clinicians who train them, and anyone who wants real-world strategies for performance and longevity.</itunes:subtitle>
    <itunes:keywords>Parkinson’s disease, Parkinson’s podcast, Parkinson’s symptoms, Living with Parkinson’s, Parkinson’s for athletes, Training with Parkinson’s, Exercise for Parkinson’s, Mobility and balance training, Parkinson’s fatigue, Tremor management, Recovery strategies, Longevity and performance, Biohacking for Parkinson’s</itunes:keywords>
    <itunes:owner>
      <itunes:name>Eric Von Frohlich</itunes:name>
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    <itunes:complete>No</itunes:complete>
    <itunes:explicit>Yes</itunes:explicit>
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      <title>100 Marathons, 100 Days, and a Honda Odyssey Named Herbie | Larry Grogin</title>
      <itunes:episode>18</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>18</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>100 Marathons, 100 Days, and a Honda Odyssey Named Herbie | Larry Grogin</itunes:title>
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        <![CDATA[<p>Larry Grogin is halfway through running 100 marathons in 100 consecutive days.</p><p>He started in New Jersey on March 24 and is making his way toward Southern California as part of Strides for Humanity, a run raising awareness and support for people living with Parkinson’s. Each day starts with the same challenge: cover 26.2 miles, manage what Parkinson’s brings, and get up the next morning to do it again.</p><p>Larry has spent decades around movement as a chiropractor, acupuncturist, and endurance athlete, having completed more than 300 marathons and 30 Ironman triathlons. Having been diagnosed in 2019 with Parkinson's, he marked his 71st birthday with the start of his run to show what movement can still look like after diagnosis.</p><p>He talks about the long warmups, the moments when his stride has to shorten, and the people along the road who help him keep going. At the center of the run is a simple hope: that someone sees what he is doing and decides to walk a mile, get out of bed, or do a little more than they thought they could.</p><p>Key Takeaways</p><p>➡️ Movement starts before the miles do.<br>Larry spends hours warming up before his body begins to feel available. The early work is patience, rhythm, and staying with it long enough to get moving.</p><p>➡️ Adaptation can be small and practical.<br>When his body resists, Larry shortens his stride, changes the pace, or gives himself time to rest. The goal is to keep moving in a way his body can handle.</p><p>➡️ One person moving can help someone else start.<br>Larry wants people with Parkinson’s to see the run and try something of their own. That might mean walking, running, getting out of bed, or doing a little more than yesterday.</p><p>➡️ Past challenges become tools.<br>Larry draws on decades of marathons, triathlons, and difficult races. Those experiences remind him that hard moments shift, and the next mile can feel different from the last.</p><p>Key Moments</p><p>01:43 Eric introduces Larry and his 100 marathons in 100 days challenge<br>02:49 Larry’s athletic background and getting into triathlon<br>04:36 Living with Parkinson’s instead of trying to beat it<br>06:38 The first signs of Parkinson’s and getting diagnosed in 2019<br>08:06 Why exercise can be hard to start with Parkinson’s<br>08:35 Larry’s long warmups and what running every day is teaching him<br>14:09 Why Larry decided to run 100 marathons in 100 days<br>15:52 What happens when the body says no<br>17:39 Running 100 consecutive marathons and reaching day 50<br>19:23 Lessons from long endurance races<br>21:19 Purpose, resilience, and the human spirit<br>28:47 The route, the support vehicle, and how Larry chooses places to run<br>30:05 Learning his off times and when to stop fighting the body<br>31:18 Medication, exercise, and managing Parkinson’s day to day<br>33:32 What 50 straight marathons have taught him about adaptation<br>36:35 Planning the finish in Calabasas<br>38:23 Larry’s message for someone newly diagnosed with Parkinson’s<br>43:58 Dreaming big and refusing to limit the goal too early<br>45:01 The hard moments behind the optimism</p><p>Larry Grogin:</p><p>Strides for Humanity / Run Larry Run: <a href="https://dpf.org/runlarryrun">https://dpf.org/runlarryrun</a><br>IG: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/runlarryrun26/">@runlarryrun26</a><br>Follow the journey: #RunLarryRun</p><p>About the Host:</p><p>Eric Von Frohlich is a fitness entrepreneur, coach, and athlete living with Parkinson's who founded EVF Performance and Row House before his diagnosis in 2020. On the podcast he talks with athletes, experts, and people refusing to let a diagnosis be the end of the story.</p><p>Parkinson's: An Athlete's Journey</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p>Disclaimer</p><p>This podcast shares personal experience and general education, not medical advice. Always talk with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to medication, treatment, or exercise.</p>]]>
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        <![CDATA[<p>Larry Grogin is halfway through running 100 marathons in 100 consecutive days.</p><p>He started in New Jersey on March 24 and is making his way toward Southern California as part of Strides for Humanity, a run raising awareness and support for people living with Parkinson’s. Each day starts with the same challenge: cover 26.2 miles, manage what Parkinson’s brings, and get up the next morning to do it again.</p><p>Larry has spent decades around movement as a chiropractor, acupuncturist, and endurance athlete, having completed more than 300 marathons and 30 Ironman triathlons. Having been diagnosed in 2019 with Parkinson's, he marked his 71st birthday with the start of his run to show what movement can still look like after diagnosis.</p><p>He talks about the long warmups, the moments when his stride has to shorten, and the people along the road who help him keep going. At the center of the run is a simple hope: that someone sees what he is doing and decides to walk a mile, get out of bed, or do a little more than they thought they could.</p><p>Key Takeaways</p><p>➡️ Movement starts before the miles do.<br>Larry spends hours warming up before his body begins to feel available. The early work is patience, rhythm, and staying with it long enough to get moving.</p><p>➡️ Adaptation can be small and practical.<br>When his body resists, Larry shortens his stride, changes the pace, or gives himself time to rest. The goal is to keep moving in a way his body can handle.</p><p>➡️ One person moving can help someone else start.<br>Larry wants people with Parkinson’s to see the run and try something of their own. That might mean walking, running, getting out of bed, or doing a little more than yesterday.</p><p>➡️ Past challenges become tools.<br>Larry draws on decades of marathons, triathlons, and difficult races. Those experiences remind him that hard moments shift, and the next mile can feel different from the last.</p><p>Key Moments</p><p>01:43 Eric introduces Larry and his 100 marathons in 100 days challenge<br>02:49 Larry’s athletic background and getting into triathlon<br>04:36 Living with Parkinson’s instead of trying to beat it<br>06:38 The first signs of Parkinson’s and getting diagnosed in 2019<br>08:06 Why exercise can be hard to start with Parkinson’s<br>08:35 Larry’s long warmups and what running every day is teaching him<br>14:09 Why Larry decided to run 100 marathons in 100 days<br>15:52 What happens when the body says no<br>17:39 Running 100 consecutive marathons and reaching day 50<br>19:23 Lessons from long endurance races<br>21:19 Purpose, resilience, and the human spirit<br>28:47 The route, the support vehicle, and how Larry chooses places to run<br>30:05 Learning his off times and when to stop fighting the body<br>31:18 Medication, exercise, and managing Parkinson’s day to day<br>33:32 What 50 straight marathons have taught him about adaptation<br>36:35 Planning the finish in Calabasas<br>38:23 Larry’s message for someone newly diagnosed with Parkinson’s<br>43:58 Dreaming big and refusing to limit the goal too early<br>45:01 The hard moments behind the optimism</p><p>Larry Grogin:</p><p>Strides for Humanity / Run Larry Run: <a href="https://dpf.org/runlarryrun">https://dpf.org/runlarryrun</a><br>IG: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/runlarryrun26/">@runlarryrun26</a><br>Follow the journey: #RunLarryRun</p><p>About the Host:</p><p>Eric Von Frohlich is a fitness entrepreneur, coach, and athlete living with Parkinson's who founded EVF Performance and Row House before his diagnosis in 2020. On the podcast he talks with athletes, experts, and people refusing to let a diagnosis be the end of the story.</p><p>Parkinson's: An Athlete's Journey</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p>Disclaimer</p><p>This podcast shares personal experience and general education, not medical advice. Always talk with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to medication, treatment, or exercise.</p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Wed, 27 May 2026 07:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
      <author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</author>
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      <itunes:author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>2653</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>Larry Grogin is halfway through running 100 marathons in 100 consecutive days.</p><p>He started in New Jersey on March 24 and is making his way toward Southern California as part of Strides for Humanity, a run raising awareness and support for people living with Parkinson’s. Each day starts with the same challenge: cover 26.2 miles, manage what Parkinson’s brings, and get up the next morning to do it again.</p><p>Larry has spent decades around movement as a chiropractor, acupuncturist, and endurance athlete, having completed more than 300 marathons and 30 Ironman triathlons. Having been diagnosed in 2019 with Parkinson's, he marked his 71st birthday with the start of his run to show what movement can still look like after diagnosis.</p><p>He talks about the long warmups, the moments when his stride has to shorten, and the people along the road who help him keep going. At the center of the run is a simple hope: that someone sees what he is doing and decides to walk a mile, get out of bed, or do a little more than they thought they could.</p><p>Key Takeaways</p><p>➡️ Movement starts before the miles do.<br>Larry spends hours warming up before his body begins to feel available. The early work is patience, rhythm, and staying with it long enough to get moving.</p><p>➡️ Adaptation can be small and practical.<br>When his body resists, Larry shortens his stride, changes the pace, or gives himself time to rest. The goal is to keep moving in a way his body can handle.</p><p>➡️ One person moving can help someone else start.<br>Larry wants people with Parkinson’s to see the run and try something of their own. That might mean walking, running, getting out of bed, or doing a little more than yesterday.</p><p>➡️ Past challenges become tools.<br>Larry draws on decades of marathons, triathlons, and difficult races. Those experiences remind him that hard moments shift, and the next mile can feel different from the last.</p><p>Key Moments</p><p>01:43 Eric introduces Larry and his 100 marathons in 100 days challenge<br>02:49 Larry’s athletic background and getting into triathlon<br>04:36 Living with Parkinson’s instead of trying to beat it<br>06:38 The first signs of Parkinson’s and getting diagnosed in 2019<br>08:06 Why exercise can be hard to start with Parkinson’s<br>08:35 Larry’s long warmups and what running every day is teaching him<br>14:09 Why Larry decided to run 100 marathons in 100 days<br>15:52 What happens when the body says no<br>17:39 Running 100 consecutive marathons and reaching day 50<br>19:23 Lessons from long endurance races<br>21:19 Purpose, resilience, and the human spirit<br>28:47 The route, the support vehicle, and how Larry chooses places to run<br>30:05 Learning his off times and when to stop fighting the body<br>31:18 Medication, exercise, and managing Parkinson’s day to day<br>33:32 What 50 straight marathons have taught him about adaptation<br>36:35 Planning the finish in Calabasas<br>38:23 Larry’s message for someone newly diagnosed with Parkinson’s<br>43:58 Dreaming big and refusing to limit the goal too early<br>45:01 The hard moments behind the optimism</p><p>Larry Grogin:</p><p>Strides for Humanity / Run Larry Run: <a href="https://dpf.org/runlarryrun">https://dpf.org/runlarryrun</a><br>IG: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/runlarryrun26/">@runlarryrun26</a><br>Follow the journey: #RunLarryRun</p><p>About the Host:</p><p>Eric Von Frohlich is a fitness entrepreneur, coach, and athlete living with Parkinson's who founded EVF Performance and Row House before his diagnosis in 2020. On the podcast he talks with athletes, experts, and people refusing to let a diagnosis be the end of the story.</p><p>Parkinson's: An Athlete's Journey</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p>Disclaimer</p><p>This podcast shares personal experience and general education, not medical advice. Always talk with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to medication, treatment, or exercise.</p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Parkinson’s disease, Parkinson’s podcast, Parkinson’s symptoms, Living with Parkinson’s, Parkinson’s for athletes, Training with Parkinson’s, Exercise for Parkinson’s, Mobility and balance training, Parkinson’s fatigue, Tremor management, Recovery strategies, Longevity and performance, Biohacking for Parkinson’s</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>Yes</itunes:explicit>
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    <item>
      <title>You Are Not Fragile | Gaia Forlani</title>
      <itunes:episode>17</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>17</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>You Are Not Fragile | Gaia Forlani</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
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        <![CDATA[<p>Before Gaia Forlani became a neuroscientist, she was a professional ballerina.</p><p>Ballet gave her a direct understanding of movement at a high level: control, rhythm, timing, strength, coordination, and the constant feedback between the brain and the body.</p><p>That background still shapes how she sees Parkinson’s.</p><p>Today, she works at the intersection of neuroscience, coaching, and Parkinson’s performance, helping people think differently about movement, training, and identity after diagnosis.</p><p>Eric and Gaia talk about why so many people with Parkinson’s are treated as fragile, even when they are strong, capable, and willing to train.</p><p>They also get into purposeful training, recovery, sleep, overtraining, cognition, and the difficult overlap between Parkinson’s and aging.</p><p>Key Takeaways</p><p>➡️ People with Parkinson’s are not fragile.<br>Gaia challenges the way people with Parkinson’s are often treated as passive, incapable, or already declining, especially when many are still strong, capable, and willing to train.</p><p>➡️ Training needs purpose, not just effort.<br>Eric and Gaia separate general activity from purposeful training, including strength, power, coordination, and movement that is matched to the person’s goals and capacity.</p><p>➡️ Recovery is part of performance.<br>More exercise is not always better. Gaia and Eric talk about sleep, recovery, overtraining, and why athletes with Parkinson’s need to take rest as seriously as training.</p><p>➡️ Identity shapes how people adapt.<br>The language people use around Parkinson’s matters. Gaia talks about seeing people as athletes rather than patients, while also recognizing that the constant “fight” mindset can become exhausting.</p><p>Key Moments</p><p>00:01 — Eric asks about Gaia’s “You Are Not Fragile” message<br>00:22 — Why Gaia pushes back on people with Parkinson’s being treated as fragile<br>03:15 — Eric reflects on mindset, gratitude, and not feeling like a victim<br>05:34 — Gaia’s path from ballerina to neuroscientist<br>10:32 — How ballet shaped Gaia’s understanding of the brain and body<br>12:46 — Treating the whole person as an athlete<br>13:00 — Language, identity, and not calling people with Parkinson’s patients<br>13:56 — Sleep, recovery, and neurological regulation<br>14:55 — The risk of doing too much after diagnosis<br>17:28 — When exercise becomes harmful without the right foundation<br>18:44 — General movement versus exercise medicine<br>20:27 — Cognition, strength training, and metabolic health<br>23:25 — Aging versus Parkinson’s symptoms<br>24:53 — Muscle loss, strength, power, and bradykinesia<br>28:34 — Looking at the person before the diagnosis<br>29:15 — Training professionals to understand Parkinson’s movement<br>31:01 — Gaia’s work moving online and reaching a wider audience<br>32:02 — Coaching as a two-way learning process<br>32:34 — Eric compares Parkinson’s adaptation to jiu-jitsu<br>34:20 — Why the “fight” against Parkinson’s can be motivating but also exhausting<br>36:16 — Eric on balancing jiu-jitsu, pickleball, recovery, and downtime<br>37:00 — Education, family support, and the social side of Parkinson’s<br>38:38 — Beliefs, mindset, and defining your own story<br>39:53 — Eric on small wins, daily resets, and moving forward</p><p>About Gaia Forlani:</p><p>Gaia is a neuroscientist specializing in sensorimotor, clinical, and movement neuroscience. A former professional ballerina, she brings together movement science, coaching, and performance experience in her work with people living with Parkinson’s. She is the co-founder of the Parkinson Performance Centre and creator of the Parkinson Power Protocol.</p><p>Connect with Gaia:</p><p>Website: <a href="http://parkinsonperformancecentre.com/">http://parkinsonperformancecentre.com/</a><br>LinkedIn: <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/gaia-forlani-ppc/">Gaia Forlani</a><br>Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/gaia.forlani.ppc/">gaia.forlani.ppc</a><br>Facebook: <a href="https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61576111081168">Gaia Forlani</a></p><p>Parkinson's: An Athlete's Journey</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer</p><p>This podcast shares personal experience and general education, not medical advice. Always talk with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to medication, treatment, or exercise.</p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>Before Gaia Forlani became a neuroscientist, she was a professional ballerina.</p><p>Ballet gave her a direct understanding of movement at a high level: control, rhythm, timing, strength, coordination, and the constant feedback between the brain and the body.</p><p>That background still shapes how she sees Parkinson’s.</p><p>Today, she works at the intersection of neuroscience, coaching, and Parkinson’s performance, helping people think differently about movement, training, and identity after diagnosis.</p><p>Eric and Gaia talk about why so many people with Parkinson’s are treated as fragile, even when they are strong, capable, and willing to train.</p><p>They also get into purposeful training, recovery, sleep, overtraining, cognition, and the difficult overlap between Parkinson’s and aging.</p><p>Key Takeaways</p><p>➡️ People with Parkinson’s are not fragile.<br>Gaia challenges the way people with Parkinson’s are often treated as passive, incapable, or already declining, especially when many are still strong, capable, and willing to train.</p><p>➡️ Training needs purpose, not just effort.<br>Eric and Gaia separate general activity from purposeful training, including strength, power, coordination, and movement that is matched to the person’s goals and capacity.</p><p>➡️ Recovery is part of performance.<br>More exercise is not always better. Gaia and Eric talk about sleep, recovery, overtraining, and why athletes with Parkinson’s need to take rest as seriously as training.</p><p>➡️ Identity shapes how people adapt.<br>The language people use around Parkinson’s matters. Gaia talks about seeing people as athletes rather than patients, while also recognizing that the constant “fight” mindset can become exhausting.</p><p>Key Moments</p><p>00:01 — Eric asks about Gaia’s “You Are Not Fragile” message<br>00:22 — Why Gaia pushes back on people with Parkinson’s being treated as fragile<br>03:15 — Eric reflects on mindset, gratitude, and not feeling like a victim<br>05:34 — Gaia’s path from ballerina to neuroscientist<br>10:32 — How ballet shaped Gaia’s understanding of the brain and body<br>12:46 — Treating the whole person as an athlete<br>13:00 — Language, identity, and not calling people with Parkinson’s patients<br>13:56 — Sleep, recovery, and neurological regulation<br>14:55 — The risk of doing too much after diagnosis<br>17:28 — When exercise becomes harmful without the right foundation<br>18:44 — General movement versus exercise medicine<br>20:27 — Cognition, strength training, and metabolic health<br>23:25 — Aging versus Parkinson’s symptoms<br>24:53 — Muscle loss, strength, power, and bradykinesia<br>28:34 — Looking at the person before the diagnosis<br>29:15 — Training professionals to understand Parkinson’s movement<br>31:01 — Gaia’s work moving online and reaching a wider audience<br>32:02 — Coaching as a two-way learning process<br>32:34 — Eric compares Parkinson’s adaptation to jiu-jitsu<br>34:20 — Why the “fight” against Parkinson’s can be motivating but also exhausting<br>36:16 — Eric on balancing jiu-jitsu, pickleball, recovery, and downtime<br>37:00 — Education, family support, and the social side of Parkinson’s<br>38:38 — Beliefs, mindset, and defining your own story<br>39:53 — Eric on small wins, daily resets, and moving forward</p><p>About Gaia Forlani:</p><p>Gaia is a neuroscientist specializing in sensorimotor, clinical, and movement neuroscience. A former professional ballerina, she brings together movement science, coaching, and performance experience in her work with people living with Parkinson’s. She is the co-founder of the Parkinson Performance Centre and creator of the Parkinson Power Protocol.</p><p>Connect with Gaia:</p><p>Website: <a href="http://parkinsonperformancecentre.com/">http://parkinsonperformancecentre.com/</a><br>LinkedIn: <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/gaia-forlani-ppc/">Gaia Forlani</a><br>Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/gaia.forlani.ppc/">gaia.forlani.ppc</a><br>Facebook: <a href="https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61576111081168">Gaia Forlani</a></p><p>Parkinson's: An Athlete's Journey</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer</p><p>This podcast shares personal experience and general education, not medical advice. Always talk with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to medication, treatment, or exercise.</p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Wed, 13 May 2026 07:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
      <author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/aac74b8d/04a552a0.mp3" length="40708069" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://img.transistorcdn.com/dsB79xOkwAEs-NNmFcV4iFPIiH0Oy5eGrEaRu4o1q24/rs:fill:0:0:1/w:1400/h:1400/q:60/mb:500000/aHR0cHM6Ly9pbWct/dXBsb2FkLXByb2R1/Y3Rpb24udHJhbnNp/c3Rvci5mbS9kOWI1/MmFlODE2ZmUzMDhj/NWI2MjIwNTgwYTQ3/ZDFlOS5wbmc.jpg"/>
      <itunes:duration>2542</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>Before Gaia Forlani became a neuroscientist, she was a professional ballerina.</p><p>Ballet gave her a direct understanding of movement at a high level: control, rhythm, timing, strength, coordination, and the constant feedback between the brain and the body.</p><p>That background still shapes how she sees Parkinson’s.</p><p>Today, she works at the intersection of neuroscience, coaching, and Parkinson’s performance, helping people think differently about movement, training, and identity after diagnosis.</p><p>Eric and Gaia talk about why so many people with Parkinson’s are treated as fragile, even when they are strong, capable, and willing to train.</p><p>They also get into purposeful training, recovery, sleep, overtraining, cognition, and the difficult overlap between Parkinson’s and aging.</p><p>Key Takeaways</p><p>➡️ People with Parkinson’s are not fragile.<br>Gaia challenges the way people with Parkinson’s are often treated as passive, incapable, or already declining, especially when many are still strong, capable, and willing to train.</p><p>➡️ Training needs purpose, not just effort.<br>Eric and Gaia separate general activity from purposeful training, including strength, power, coordination, and movement that is matched to the person’s goals and capacity.</p><p>➡️ Recovery is part of performance.<br>More exercise is not always better. Gaia and Eric talk about sleep, recovery, overtraining, and why athletes with Parkinson’s need to take rest as seriously as training.</p><p>➡️ Identity shapes how people adapt.<br>The language people use around Parkinson’s matters. Gaia talks about seeing people as athletes rather than patients, while also recognizing that the constant “fight” mindset can become exhausting.</p><p>Key Moments</p><p>00:01 — Eric asks about Gaia’s “You Are Not Fragile” message<br>00:22 — Why Gaia pushes back on people with Parkinson’s being treated as fragile<br>03:15 — Eric reflects on mindset, gratitude, and not feeling like a victim<br>05:34 — Gaia’s path from ballerina to neuroscientist<br>10:32 — How ballet shaped Gaia’s understanding of the brain and body<br>12:46 — Treating the whole person as an athlete<br>13:00 — Language, identity, and not calling people with Parkinson’s patients<br>13:56 — Sleep, recovery, and neurological regulation<br>14:55 — The risk of doing too much after diagnosis<br>17:28 — When exercise becomes harmful without the right foundation<br>18:44 — General movement versus exercise medicine<br>20:27 — Cognition, strength training, and metabolic health<br>23:25 — Aging versus Parkinson’s symptoms<br>24:53 — Muscle loss, strength, power, and bradykinesia<br>28:34 — Looking at the person before the diagnosis<br>29:15 — Training professionals to understand Parkinson’s movement<br>31:01 — Gaia’s work moving online and reaching a wider audience<br>32:02 — Coaching as a two-way learning process<br>32:34 — Eric compares Parkinson’s adaptation to jiu-jitsu<br>34:20 — Why the “fight” against Parkinson’s can be motivating but also exhausting<br>36:16 — Eric on balancing jiu-jitsu, pickleball, recovery, and downtime<br>37:00 — Education, family support, and the social side of Parkinson’s<br>38:38 — Beliefs, mindset, and defining your own story<br>39:53 — Eric on small wins, daily resets, and moving forward</p><p>About Gaia Forlani:</p><p>Gaia is a neuroscientist specializing in sensorimotor, clinical, and movement neuroscience. A former professional ballerina, she brings together movement science, coaching, and performance experience in her work with people living with Parkinson’s. She is the co-founder of the Parkinson Performance Centre and creator of the Parkinson Power Protocol.</p><p>Connect with Gaia:</p><p>Website: <a href="http://parkinsonperformancecentre.com/">http://parkinsonperformancecentre.com/</a><br>LinkedIn: <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/gaia-forlani-ppc/">Gaia Forlani</a><br>Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/gaia.forlani.ppc/">gaia.forlani.ppc</a><br>Facebook: <a href="https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61576111081168">Gaia Forlani</a></p><p>Parkinson's: An Athlete's Journey</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer</p><p>This podcast shares personal experience and general education, not medical advice. Always talk with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to medication, treatment, or exercise.</p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Parkinson’s disease, Parkinson’s podcast, Parkinson’s symptoms, Living with Parkinson’s, Parkinson’s for athletes, Training with Parkinson’s, Exercise for Parkinson’s, Mobility and balance training, Parkinson’s fatigue, Tremor management, Recovery strategies, Longevity and performance, Biohacking for Parkinson’s</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
      <podcast:transcript url="https://share.transistor.fm/s/aac74b8d/transcript.txt" type="text/plain"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Ankle Weights and Stackable Wins | Jay Freyensee</title>
      <itunes:episode>16</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>16</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>Ankle Weights and Stackable Wins | Jay Freyensee</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">fcc2ebb2-96ea-46d0-8bab-ad1d79f67f83</guid>
      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/f39cc3d5</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>Jay Freyensee has always moved through life as an athlete.</p><p>Cycling, mountain biking, martial arts, Muay Thai, cross-country skiing, running, and Spartan-style events have all shaped how he understands effort, progress, and identity. His athletic life has never been about one discipline. It has been about staying active, learning what a sport asks of him, and finding the next way to challenge himself.</p><p>After being diagnosed with Parkinson’s in his late 40s, Jay had to rethink what it meant to stay competitive and keep trusting his body.</p><p>Kickboxing remains a key part of his training because it demands power, speed, coordination, reaction, and focus in the same session. He runs with ankle weights to help reinforce his gait, keeps strength work in the week, and uses races like Spartan DECA as a reason to keep building.</p><p>Jay gets into his diagnosis, adaptation, clinical trials, support groups, and the importance of finding people who understand young-onset Parkinson’s. He also shares what he would tell someone newly diagnosed: get tested, stay close to the research, keep exercising, and do not try to handle it alone.</p><p>Key Takeaways</p><p>➡️ Training became the anchor after diagnosis.<br>Exercise shifted from athletic routine to daily structure, giving him a way to stay capable, measure progress, and keep fighting back.</p><p>➡️ Adaptation became part of the athlete’s job.<br>Jay uses tools like ankle weights, kickboxing, strength training, and Spartan DECA goals to keep challenging his body while adjusting to what Parkinson’s changes.</p><p>➡️ Community made the diagnosis easier to carry.<br>Finding people who understood young-onset Parkinson’s gave Jay support, perspective, and a place where he did not have to explain every part of the experience.</p><p>➡️ Newly diagnosed people need action, testing, and connection.<br>Jay encourages genetic testing, staying aware of clinical trials, continuing to exercise, and telling trusted people instead of trying to carry the diagnosis alone.</p><p>Key Moments:</p><p>00:45 — Jay’s athletic background and competitive history<br>03:30 — Training Muay Thai in Thailand<br>07:20 — First signs of gait changes<br>08:16 — Foot cramping during runs<br>10:36 — Receiving the Parkinson’s diagnosis<br>11:52 — Searching for better information after diagnosis<br>14:34 — Jay’s weekly training routine<br>14:55 — Running with ankle weights<br>16:34 — Spartan DECA as a training target<br>18:36 — Young-onset Parkinson’s and work<br>19:00 — Hand function, typing, and career change<br>21:52 — Navigating disability and insurance<br>31:22 — Presence, breathing, and mindset<br>36:52 — Clinical trials and future treatments<br>41:28 — Genetic testing and advice for newly diagnosed people<br>43:46 — Sharing the diagnosis with community<br>44:46 — Parkinson’s, identity, and athletic confidence<br>48:47 — Finding support from people who understand</p><p>Connect with Jay</p><p>LinkedIn: <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/james-jay-freyensee-6193a7/">https://www.linkedin.com/in/james-jay-freyensee-6193a7/</a><br>Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/freyguys_redlines/">https://www.instagram.com/freyguys_redlines/</a></p><p>About the Hosts</p><p>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt are athletes living with Parkinson’s, sharing the day to day reality of training, adapting, and figuring it out as they go. Through honest conversations, they explore what helps, what does not, and how to keep moving forward with purpose.</p><p>Follow / Connect</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer</p><p>This podcast shares personal experience and general education, not medical advice. Always talk with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to medication, treatment, or exercise.</p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>Jay Freyensee has always moved through life as an athlete.</p><p>Cycling, mountain biking, martial arts, Muay Thai, cross-country skiing, running, and Spartan-style events have all shaped how he understands effort, progress, and identity. His athletic life has never been about one discipline. It has been about staying active, learning what a sport asks of him, and finding the next way to challenge himself.</p><p>After being diagnosed with Parkinson’s in his late 40s, Jay had to rethink what it meant to stay competitive and keep trusting his body.</p><p>Kickboxing remains a key part of his training because it demands power, speed, coordination, reaction, and focus in the same session. He runs with ankle weights to help reinforce his gait, keeps strength work in the week, and uses races like Spartan DECA as a reason to keep building.</p><p>Jay gets into his diagnosis, adaptation, clinical trials, support groups, and the importance of finding people who understand young-onset Parkinson’s. He also shares what he would tell someone newly diagnosed: get tested, stay close to the research, keep exercising, and do not try to handle it alone.</p><p>Key Takeaways</p><p>➡️ Training became the anchor after diagnosis.<br>Exercise shifted from athletic routine to daily structure, giving him a way to stay capable, measure progress, and keep fighting back.</p><p>➡️ Adaptation became part of the athlete’s job.<br>Jay uses tools like ankle weights, kickboxing, strength training, and Spartan DECA goals to keep challenging his body while adjusting to what Parkinson’s changes.</p><p>➡️ Community made the diagnosis easier to carry.<br>Finding people who understood young-onset Parkinson’s gave Jay support, perspective, and a place where he did not have to explain every part of the experience.</p><p>➡️ Newly diagnosed people need action, testing, and connection.<br>Jay encourages genetic testing, staying aware of clinical trials, continuing to exercise, and telling trusted people instead of trying to carry the diagnosis alone.</p><p>Key Moments:</p><p>00:45 — Jay’s athletic background and competitive history<br>03:30 — Training Muay Thai in Thailand<br>07:20 — First signs of gait changes<br>08:16 — Foot cramping during runs<br>10:36 — Receiving the Parkinson’s diagnosis<br>11:52 — Searching for better information after diagnosis<br>14:34 — Jay’s weekly training routine<br>14:55 — Running with ankle weights<br>16:34 — Spartan DECA as a training target<br>18:36 — Young-onset Parkinson’s and work<br>19:00 — Hand function, typing, and career change<br>21:52 — Navigating disability and insurance<br>31:22 — Presence, breathing, and mindset<br>36:52 — Clinical trials and future treatments<br>41:28 — Genetic testing and advice for newly diagnosed people<br>43:46 — Sharing the diagnosis with community<br>44:46 — Parkinson’s, identity, and athletic confidence<br>48:47 — Finding support from people who understand</p><p>Connect with Jay</p><p>LinkedIn: <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/james-jay-freyensee-6193a7/">https://www.linkedin.com/in/james-jay-freyensee-6193a7/</a><br>Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/freyguys_redlines/">https://www.instagram.com/freyguys_redlines/</a></p><p>About the Hosts</p><p>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt are athletes living with Parkinson’s, sharing the day to day reality of training, adapting, and figuring it out as they go. Through honest conversations, they explore what helps, what does not, and how to keep moving forward with purpose.</p><p>Follow / Connect</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer</p><p>This podcast shares personal experience and general education, not medical advice. Always talk with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to medication, treatment, or exercise.</p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Wed, 06 May 2026 07:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
      <author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/f39cc3d5/1f6fb455.mp3" length="51029597" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://img.transistorcdn.com/KXsRD8rA2BZR8Dos03UYTYgpdTmGuqUNWXaIuXNggcw/rs:fill:0:0:1/w:1400/h:1400/q:60/mb:500000/aHR0cHM6Ly9pbWct/dXBsb2FkLXByb2R1/Y3Rpb24udHJhbnNp/c3Rvci5mbS9mM2Nk/ZGE1MWY3MTM2Y2Jj/MGE2ZDZmMTVkY2I0/MGY5My5wbmc.jpg"/>
      <itunes:duration>3186</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>Jay Freyensee has always moved through life as an athlete.</p><p>Cycling, mountain biking, martial arts, Muay Thai, cross-country skiing, running, and Spartan-style events have all shaped how he understands effort, progress, and identity. His athletic life has never been about one discipline. It has been about staying active, learning what a sport asks of him, and finding the next way to challenge himself.</p><p>After being diagnosed with Parkinson’s in his late 40s, Jay had to rethink what it meant to stay competitive and keep trusting his body.</p><p>Kickboxing remains a key part of his training because it demands power, speed, coordination, reaction, and focus in the same session. He runs with ankle weights to help reinforce his gait, keeps strength work in the week, and uses races like Spartan DECA as a reason to keep building.</p><p>Jay gets into his diagnosis, adaptation, clinical trials, support groups, and the importance of finding people who understand young-onset Parkinson’s. He also shares what he would tell someone newly diagnosed: get tested, stay close to the research, keep exercising, and do not try to handle it alone.</p><p>Key Takeaways</p><p>➡️ Training became the anchor after diagnosis.<br>Exercise shifted from athletic routine to daily structure, giving him a way to stay capable, measure progress, and keep fighting back.</p><p>➡️ Adaptation became part of the athlete’s job.<br>Jay uses tools like ankle weights, kickboxing, strength training, and Spartan DECA goals to keep challenging his body while adjusting to what Parkinson’s changes.</p><p>➡️ Community made the diagnosis easier to carry.<br>Finding people who understood young-onset Parkinson’s gave Jay support, perspective, and a place where he did not have to explain every part of the experience.</p><p>➡️ Newly diagnosed people need action, testing, and connection.<br>Jay encourages genetic testing, staying aware of clinical trials, continuing to exercise, and telling trusted people instead of trying to carry the diagnosis alone.</p><p>Key Moments:</p><p>00:45 — Jay’s athletic background and competitive history<br>03:30 — Training Muay Thai in Thailand<br>07:20 — First signs of gait changes<br>08:16 — Foot cramping during runs<br>10:36 — Receiving the Parkinson’s diagnosis<br>11:52 — Searching for better information after diagnosis<br>14:34 — Jay’s weekly training routine<br>14:55 — Running with ankle weights<br>16:34 — Spartan DECA as a training target<br>18:36 — Young-onset Parkinson’s and work<br>19:00 — Hand function, typing, and career change<br>21:52 — Navigating disability and insurance<br>31:22 — Presence, breathing, and mindset<br>36:52 — Clinical trials and future treatments<br>41:28 — Genetic testing and advice for newly diagnosed people<br>43:46 — Sharing the diagnosis with community<br>44:46 — Parkinson’s, identity, and athletic confidence<br>48:47 — Finding support from people who understand</p><p>Connect with Jay</p><p>LinkedIn: <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/james-jay-freyensee-6193a7/">https://www.linkedin.com/in/james-jay-freyensee-6193a7/</a><br>Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/freyguys_redlines/">https://www.instagram.com/freyguys_redlines/</a></p><p>About the Hosts</p><p>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt are athletes living with Parkinson’s, sharing the day to day reality of training, adapting, and figuring it out as they go. Through honest conversations, they explore what helps, what does not, and how to keep moving forward with purpose.</p><p>Follow / Connect</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer</p><p>This podcast shares personal experience and general education, not medical advice. Always talk with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to medication, treatment, or exercise.</p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Parkinson’s disease, Parkinson’s podcast, Parkinson’s symptoms, Living with Parkinson’s, Parkinson’s for athletes, Training with Parkinson’s, Exercise for Parkinson’s, Mobility and balance training, Parkinson’s fatigue, Tremor management, Recovery strategies, Longevity and performance, Biohacking for Parkinson’s</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
      <podcast:transcript url="https://share.transistor.fm/s/f39cc3d5/transcript.txt" type="text/plain"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>From Diagnosis to Saying It Out Loud | Jeff Martin</title>
      <itunes:episode>15</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>15</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>From Diagnosis to Saying It Out Loud | Jeff Martin</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">6fef7fd9-233f-4c48-946b-ce1893ead80a</guid>
      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/dd2f15a2</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>Jeff Martin helped shape what group fitness looks like today.</p><p>Over nearly five decades, he built one of the early studio environments in New York City where people trained together, showed up consistently, and stayed connected to the work. That model spread, and companies like Equinox and Crunch grew out of foundations that started in studios like his.</p><p>For 47 years, Jeff has been teaching classes. Tens of thousands of sessions. Movement has been a daily part of how he lives and works.</p><p>He is now sharing publicly for the first time that he has Parkinson’s.</p><p>In this conversation, Jeff speaks about his diagnosis, the hesitation around saying it out loud, and what shifted once he did. He reflects on how his relationship with training has changed, why exercise has become non-negotiable, and how he is adjusting to changes that show up day to day.</p><p>While his experience with Parkinson’s is still new, he is actively working through it in real time and beginning to open up to others while continuing to train.</p><p>Key Moments:</p><p>00:32 — Reconnecting and Jeff’s background in NYC fitness<br>02:18 — First public disclosure of Parkinson’s diagnosis<br>02:47 — Early symptoms and initial misdiagnosis<br>03:25 — Receiving the diagnosis<br>04:26 — Hesitation around engaging with the Parkinson’s community<br>06:13 — Humility and asking for help<br>06:44 — Changes in daily behavior and awareness<br>13:00 — Lifestyle shifts and consistency with exercise<br>17:15 — Processing the diagnosis and perspective shifts<br>19:30 — Changes in social life and routine<br>21:08 — Decision to share publicly<br>23:57 — Redefining strength and showing up<br>28:58 — Managing outside advice and information<br>32:00 — Training, coordination, and staying active<br>36:08 — What he continues to hold onto</p><p>Connect with Jeff:</p><p>Website: https://jeffmartinfitness.com</p><p>About the Hosts</p><p>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt are athletes living with Parkinson’s, sharing the day to day reality of training, adapting, and figuring it out as they go. Through honest conversations, they explore what helps, what does not, and how to keep moving forward with purpose.</p><p>Follow / Connect</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer</p><p>This podcast shares personal experience and general education, not medical advice. Always talk with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to medication, treatment, or exercise.</p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>Jeff Martin helped shape what group fitness looks like today.</p><p>Over nearly five decades, he built one of the early studio environments in New York City where people trained together, showed up consistently, and stayed connected to the work. That model spread, and companies like Equinox and Crunch grew out of foundations that started in studios like his.</p><p>For 47 years, Jeff has been teaching classes. Tens of thousands of sessions. Movement has been a daily part of how he lives and works.</p><p>He is now sharing publicly for the first time that he has Parkinson’s.</p><p>In this conversation, Jeff speaks about his diagnosis, the hesitation around saying it out loud, and what shifted once he did. He reflects on how his relationship with training has changed, why exercise has become non-negotiable, and how he is adjusting to changes that show up day to day.</p><p>While his experience with Parkinson’s is still new, he is actively working through it in real time and beginning to open up to others while continuing to train.</p><p>Key Moments:</p><p>00:32 — Reconnecting and Jeff’s background in NYC fitness<br>02:18 — First public disclosure of Parkinson’s diagnosis<br>02:47 — Early symptoms and initial misdiagnosis<br>03:25 — Receiving the diagnosis<br>04:26 — Hesitation around engaging with the Parkinson’s community<br>06:13 — Humility and asking for help<br>06:44 — Changes in daily behavior and awareness<br>13:00 — Lifestyle shifts and consistency with exercise<br>17:15 — Processing the diagnosis and perspective shifts<br>19:30 — Changes in social life and routine<br>21:08 — Decision to share publicly<br>23:57 — Redefining strength and showing up<br>28:58 — Managing outside advice and information<br>32:00 — Training, coordination, and staying active<br>36:08 — What he continues to hold onto</p><p>Connect with Jeff:</p><p>Website: https://jeffmartinfitness.com</p><p>About the Hosts</p><p>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt are athletes living with Parkinson’s, sharing the day to day reality of training, adapting, and figuring it out as they go. Through honest conversations, they explore what helps, what does not, and how to keep moving forward with purpose.</p><p>Follow / Connect</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer</p><p>This podcast shares personal experience and general education, not medical advice. Always talk with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to medication, treatment, or exercise.</p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Wed, 29 Apr 2026 07:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
      <author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/dd2f15a2/59697a08.mp3" length="38799275" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://img.transistorcdn.com/db2Vz9fInxyUNHuGKo04SFhvGma37K3UceBjrVvOM7M/rs:fill:0:0:1/w:1400/h:1400/q:60/mb:500000/aHR0cHM6Ly9pbWct/dXBsb2FkLXByb2R1/Y3Rpb24udHJhbnNp/c3Rvci5mbS80NGUz/ZWYyNzYyNDU4MWRl/YmU0Y2RhYjc4MmFj/MTFhNS5wbmc.jpg"/>
      <itunes:duration>2422</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>Jeff Martin helped shape what group fitness looks like today.</p><p>Over nearly five decades, he built one of the early studio environments in New York City where people trained together, showed up consistently, and stayed connected to the work. That model spread, and companies like Equinox and Crunch grew out of foundations that started in studios like his.</p><p>For 47 years, Jeff has been teaching classes. Tens of thousands of sessions. Movement has been a daily part of how he lives and works.</p><p>He is now sharing publicly for the first time that he has Parkinson’s.</p><p>In this conversation, Jeff speaks about his diagnosis, the hesitation around saying it out loud, and what shifted once he did. He reflects on how his relationship with training has changed, why exercise has become non-negotiable, and how he is adjusting to changes that show up day to day.</p><p>While his experience with Parkinson’s is still new, he is actively working through it in real time and beginning to open up to others while continuing to train.</p><p>Key Moments:</p><p>00:32 — Reconnecting and Jeff’s background in NYC fitness<br>02:18 — First public disclosure of Parkinson’s diagnosis<br>02:47 — Early symptoms and initial misdiagnosis<br>03:25 — Receiving the diagnosis<br>04:26 — Hesitation around engaging with the Parkinson’s community<br>06:13 — Humility and asking for help<br>06:44 — Changes in daily behavior and awareness<br>13:00 — Lifestyle shifts and consistency with exercise<br>17:15 — Processing the diagnosis and perspective shifts<br>19:30 — Changes in social life and routine<br>21:08 — Decision to share publicly<br>23:57 — Redefining strength and showing up<br>28:58 — Managing outside advice and information<br>32:00 — Training, coordination, and staying active<br>36:08 — What he continues to hold onto</p><p>Connect with Jeff:</p><p>Website: https://jeffmartinfitness.com</p><p>About the Hosts</p><p>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt are athletes living with Parkinson’s, sharing the day to day reality of training, adapting, and figuring it out as they go. Through honest conversations, they explore what helps, what does not, and how to keep moving forward with purpose.</p><p>Follow / Connect</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer</p><p>This podcast shares personal experience and general education, not medical advice. Always talk with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to medication, treatment, or exercise.</p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Parkinson’s disease, Parkinson’s podcast, Parkinson’s symptoms, Living with Parkinson’s, Parkinson’s for athletes, Training with Parkinson’s, Exercise for Parkinson’s, Mobility and balance training, Parkinson’s fatigue, Tremor management, Recovery strategies, Longevity and performance, Biohacking for Parkinson’s</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
      <podcast:transcript url="https://share.transistor.fm/s/dd2f15a2/transcript.txt" type="text/plain"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Stacked Days Add Up | Greg Schaefer</title>
      <itunes:episode>14</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>14</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>Stacked Days Add Up | Greg Schaefer</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">f735ee93-18eb-4a4f-9170-37c77d5760e9</guid>
      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/136d88a9</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>Greg Schaefer is used to long races. Kona, Ironman, and years of knowing what his body could do.</p><p>When that started to change, he noticed.</p><p>In 2023, he was diagnosed with Young-Onset Parkinson’s. He still trains and races, but the approach is different, and some days require more adjustment than others.</p><p>He speaks openly about the days when he pulls back, when patience runs thin, and when the mental side is harder than anything physical. He also talks about what helps. Structure, training partners, and having someone waiting for you at 7 a.m. so you actually show up.</p><p>Greg is clear about his “why.” Being present for his wife. Setting an example for his kids. Showing them what it looks like to keep going, even when things aren’t going well.</p><p>What comes through is how he keeps showing up, and how those days, one at a time, still stack up.</p><p>Key Takeaways:</p><p>➡️ You can’t rely on motivation to carry you.<br>When someone’s expecting you at a set time, you show up. That structure matters more than how you feel that day.</p><p>➡️ Your reason has to be specific.<br>For Greg, it’s his wife and his kids, and that’s who he shows up for every day.</p><p>➡️ Some days just aren’t there.<br>Energy, movement, focus, they don’t always line up. Learning to recognize that without turning it into failure is part of it.</p><p>➡️ Adjusting is part of staying in it.<br>The training is still there, but the expectations shift. Showing up and finishing start to matter more than performance.</p><p>➡️ Over time, those days stack.<br>Not every day is strong, but the consistency builds when you keep showing up across all of them.</p><p>Key Moments:</p><p>01:40 — Realizing something was off during Kona preparation<br>02:39 — Finishing Kona hours later than expected<br>05:38 — Diagnosis in March 2023<br>09:11 — Training changes and adjusting expectations<br>10:48 — First race back and a different experience of racing<br>13:41 — “What you do during the calm…”<br>16:17 — The idea of “stacked days”<br>23:09 — Daily routine and disrupted sleep<br>29:49 — Managing good days and bad days<br>35:51 — Accountability and training with others<br>37:08 — Starting the Forward Motion Fund<br>41:08 — The role of caregivers</p><p>About Greg Schaefer</p><p>Greg Schaefer is a 19-time Ironman athlete, entrepreneur, and keynote speaker living with Young-Onset Parkinson’s disease. Diagnosed in 2023, Greg continues to train and compete, while managing the day-to-day realities of the condition.</p><p>He shares his journey publicly and co-founded the Forward Motion Fund with his wife to support families affected by Parkinson’s and contribute to research and awareness.</p><p>Connect with Greg</p><p>Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/gschaeferundefined/">@gschaeferundefined</a><br>Facebook: <a href="https://www.facebook.com/GSchaeferDefined/">GSchaeferDefined</a><br>LinkedIn: <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/gregory-schaefer-4892027/">linkedin.com/in/gregory-schaefer</a><br>About the Forward Motion Fund: <a href="https://gregoryschaefer.com/forward-motion-fund/">https://gregoryschaefer.com/forward-motion-fund/</a></p><p>About the Hosts</p><p>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt are athletes living with Parkinson’s, sharing the day to day reality of training, adapting, and figuring it out as they go. Through honest conversations, they explore what helps, what does not, and how to keep moving forward with purpose.</p><p>Follow / Connect</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer</p><p>This podcast shares personal experience and general education, not medical advice. Always talk with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to medication, treatment, or exercise.</p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>Greg Schaefer is used to long races. Kona, Ironman, and years of knowing what his body could do.</p><p>When that started to change, he noticed.</p><p>In 2023, he was diagnosed with Young-Onset Parkinson’s. He still trains and races, but the approach is different, and some days require more adjustment than others.</p><p>He speaks openly about the days when he pulls back, when patience runs thin, and when the mental side is harder than anything physical. He also talks about what helps. Structure, training partners, and having someone waiting for you at 7 a.m. so you actually show up.</p><p>Greg is clear about his “why.” Being present for his wife. Setting an example for his kids. Showing them what it looks like to keep going, even when things aren’t going well.</p><p>What comes through is how he keeps showing up, and how those days, one at a time, still stack up.</p><p>Key Takeaways:</p><p>➡️ You can’t rely on motivation to carry you.<br>When someone’s expecting you at a set time, you show up. That structure matters more than how you feel that day.</p><p>➡️ Your reason has to be specific.<br>For Greg, it’s his wife and his kids, and that’s who he shows up for every day.</p><p>➡️ Some days just aren’t there.<br>Energy, movement, focus, they don’t always line up. Learning to recognize that without turning it into failure is part of it.</p><p>➡️ Adjusting is part of staying in it.<br>The training is still there, but the expectations shift. Showing up and finishing start to matter more than performance.</p><p>➡️ Over time, those days stack.<br>Not every day is strong, but the consistency builds when you keep showing up across all of them.</p><p>Key Moments:</p><p>01:40 — Realizing something was off during Kona preparation<br>02:39 — Finishing Kona hours later than expected<br>05:38 — Diagnosis in March 2023<br>09:11 — Training changes and adjusting expectations<br>10:48 — First race back and a different experience of racing<br>13:41 — “What you do during the calm…”<br>16:17 — The idea of “stacked days”<br>23:09 — Daily routine and disrupted sleep<br>29:49 — Managing good days and bad days<br>35:51 — Accountability and training with others<br>37:08 — Starting the Forward Motion Fund<br>41:08 — The role of caregivers</p><p>About Greg Schaefer</p><p>Greg Schaefer is a 19-time Ironman athlete, entrepreneur, and keynote speaker living with Young-Onset Parkinson’s disease. Diagnosed in 2023, Greg continues to train and compete, while managing the day-to-day realities of the condition.</p><p>He shares his journey publicly and co-founded the Forward Motion Fund with his wife to support families affected by Parkinson’s and contribute to research and awareness.</p><p>Connect with Greg</p><p>Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/gschaeferundefined/">@gschaeferundefined</a><br>Facebook: <a href="https://www.facebook.com/GSchaeferDefined/">GSchaeferDefined</a><br>LinkedIn: <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/gregory-schaefer-4892027/">linkedin.com/in/gregory-schaefer</a><br>About the Forward Motion Fund: <a href="https://gregoryschaefer.com/forward-motion-fund/">https://gregoryschaefer.com/forward-motion-fund/</a></p><p>About the Hosts</p><p>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt are athletes living with Parkinson’s, sharing the day to day reality of training, adapting, and figuring it out as they go. Through honest conversations, they explore what helps, what does not, and how to keep moving forward with purpose.</p><p>Follow / Connect</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer</p><p>This podcast shares personal experience and general education, not medical advice. Always talk with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to medication, treatment, or exercise.</p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Wed, 15 Apr 2026 07:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
      <author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/136d88a9/bab44649.mp3" length="42537489" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://img.transistorcdn.com/XadR5tZEo2E322WcYMr_U69TAGl1RDElsy-Ugp-B3ps/rs:fill:0:0:1/w:1400/h:1400/q:60/mb:500000/aHR0cHM6Ly9pbWct/dXBsb2FkLXByb2R1/Y3Rpb24udHJhbnNp/c3Rvci5mbS80ZjBl/MDVkZjNjMTdjYjMz/MWE2ZTYzNTY1YmQ4/ZDNkYS5wbmc.jpg"/>
      <itunes:duration>2655</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>Greg Schaefer is used to long races. Kona, Ironman, and years of knowing what his body could do.</p><p>When that started to change, he noticed.</p><p>In 2023, he was diagnosed with Young-Onset Parkinson’s. He still trains and races, but the approach is different, and some days require more adjustment than others.</p><p>He speaks openly about the days when he pulls back, when patience runs thin, and when the mental side is harder than anything physical. He also talks about what helps. Structure, training partners, and having someone waiting for you at 7 a.m. so you actually show up.</p><p>Greg is clear about his “why.” Being present for his wife. Setting an example for his kids. Showing them what it looks like to keep going, even when things aren’t going well.</p><p>What comes through is how he keeps showing up, and how those days, one at a time, still stack up.</p><p>Key Takeaways:</p><p>➡️ You can’t rely on motivation to carry you.<br>When someone’s expecting you at a set time, you show up. That structure matters more than how you feel that day.</p><p>➡️ Your reason has to be specific.<br>For Greg, it’s his wife and his kids, and that’s who he shows up for every day.</p><p>➡️ Some days just aren’t there.<br>Energy, movement, focus, they don’t always line up. Learning to recognize that without turning it into failure is part of it.</p><p>➡️ Adjusting is part of staying in it.<br>The training is still there, but the expectations shift. Showing up and finishing start to matter more than performance.</p><p>➡️ Over time, those days stack.<br>Not every day is strong, but the consistency builds when you keep showing up across all of them.</p><p>Key Moments:</p><p>01:40 — Realizing something was off during Kona preparation<br>02:39 — Finishing Kona hours later than expected<br>05:38 — Diagnosis in March 2023<br>09:11 — Training changes and adjusting expectations<br>10:48 — First race back and a different experience of racing<br>13:41 — “What you do during the calm…”<br>16:17 — The idea of “stacked days”<br>23:09 — Daily routine and disrupted sleep<br>29:49 — Managing good days and bad days<br>35:51 — Accountability and training with others<br>37:08 — Starting the Forward Motion Fund<br>41:08 — The role of caregivers</p><p>About Greg Schaefer</p><p>Greg Schaefer is a 19-time Ironman athlete, entrepreneur, and keynote speaker living with Young-Onset Parkinson’s disease. Diagnosed in 2023, Greg continues to train and compete, while managing the day-to-day realities of the condition.</p><p>He shares his journey publicly and co-founded the Forward Motion Fund with his wife to support families affected by Parkinson’s and contribute to research and awareness.</p><p>Connect with Greg</p><p>Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/gschaeferundefined/">@gschaeferundefined</a><br>Facebook: <a href="https://www.facebook.com/GSchaeferDefined/">GSchaeferDefined</a><br>LinkedIn: <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/gregory-schaefer-4892027/">linkedin.com/in/gregory-schaefer</a><br>About the Forward Motion Fund: <a href="https://gregoryschaefer.com/forward-motion-fund/">https://gregoryschaefer.com/forward-motion-fund/</a></p><p>About the Hosts</p><p>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt are athletes living with Parkinson’s, sharing the day to day reality of training, adapting, and figuring it out as they go. Through honest conversations, they explore what helps, what does not, and how to keep moving forward with purpose.</p><p>Follow / Connect</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer</p><p>This podcast shares personal experience and general education, not medical advice. Always talk with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to medication, treatment, or exercise.</p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Parkinson’s disease, Parkinson’s podcast, Parkinson’s symptoms, Living with Parkinson’s, Parkinson’s for athletes, Training with Parkinson’s, Exercise for Parkinson’s, Mobility and balance training, Parkinson’s fatigue, Tremor management, Recovery strategies, Longevity and performance, Biohacking for Parkinson’s</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
      <podcast:transcript url="https://share.transistor.fm/s/136d88a9/transcript.txt" type="text/plain"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Trying to Run Again (And Hitting the Same Wall)</title>
      <itunes:episode>13</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>13</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>Trying to Run Again (And Hitting the Same Wall)</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">e4db37df-4025-49b2-8dca-3e1241853152</guid>
      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/edbb2ac3</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>Eric and Todd check in on training, setbacks, and where things are at right now.</p><p>Eric shares how rethinking his heart rate approach has allowed him to start pushing intensity again. Todd talks through the cycle of trying to return to running and encountering the same knee issue tied to motor control on his left side.</p><p>They also touch on the early phase of Parkinson's after diagnosis, when you're still training, still functioning, and it doesn't always feel as serious as you expected.</p><p>Along the way, they reflect on recent conversations with other athletes living with Parkinson’s and how similar many of those early experiences can be.</p><p><strong>Key Takeaways</strong></p><p>➡️ You can keep pushing and get the same result every time.<br>Trying to run again keeps ending the same way, which means something else has to change.</p><p>➡️ Early on, it doesn’t always feel as serious as you expected.<br>When you’re still training and functioning well, it’s easy to think things might stay that way.</p><p>➡️ Physical training is only part of it.<br>Mindset and the people around you play just as big a role as what you’re doing physically.</p><p><strong>Key Moments</strong></p><p>00:00 – Training updates and current routines<br>02:30 – Running setbacks and knee issues<br>05:30 – Reflections since starting the podcast<br>06:30 – Early diagnosis experiences<br>08:30 – The early phase and shifting expectations<br>10:00 – Adjusting training vs pushing through<br>11:30 – Mental side and community</p><p><strong>About the Hosts</strong></p><p>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt are athletes living with Parkinson’s, sharing the day to day reality of training, adapting, and figuring it out as they go. Through honest conversations, they explore what helps, what does not, and how to keep moving forward with purpose.</p><p><strong>Follow / Connect</strong></p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br><strong>Disclaimer</strong></p><p>This podcast shares personal experience and general education, not medical advice. Always talk with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to medication, treatment, or exercise.</p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>Eric and Todd check in on training, setbacks, and where things are at right now.</p><p>Eric shares how rethinking his heart rate approach has allowed him to start pushing intensity again. Todd talks through the cycle of trying to return to running and encountering the same knee issue tied to motor control on his left side.</p><p>They also touch on the early phase of Parkinson's after diagnosis, when you're still training, still functioning, and it doesn't always feel as serious as you expected.</p><p>Along the way, they reflect on recent conversations with other athletes living with Parkinson’s and how similar many of those early experiences can be.</p><p><strong>Key Takeaways</strong></p><p>➡️ You can keep pushing and get the same result every time.<br>Trying to run again keeps ending the same way, which means something else has to change.</p><p>➡️ Early on, it doesn’t always feel as serious as you expected.<br>When you’re still training and functioning well, it’s easy to think things might stay that way.</p><p>➡️ Physical training is only part of it.<br>Mindset and the people around you play just as big a role as what you’re doing physically.</p><p><strong>Key Moments</strong></p><p>00:00 – Training updates and current routines<br>02:30 – Running setbacks and knee issues<br>05:30 – Reflections since starting the podcast<br>06:30 – Early diagnosis experiences<br>08:30 – The early phase and shifting expectations<br>10:00 – Adjusting training vs pushing through<br>11:30 – Mental side and community</p><p><strong>About the Hosts</strong></p><p>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt are athletes living with Parkinson’s, sharing the day to day reality of training, adapting, and figuring it out as they go. Through honest conversations, they explore what helps, what does not, and how to keep moving forward with purpose.</p><p><strong>Follow / Connect</strong></p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br><strong>Disclaimer</strong></p><p>This podcast shares personal experience and general education, not medical advice. Always talk with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to medication, treatment, or exercise.</p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Wed, 08 Apr 2026 07:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
      <author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/edbb2ac3/f85d5410.mp3" length="12594000" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://img.transistorcdn.com/gZ5EzCR4betTyC3DZg-Dy2sp1nZz2rIeuHVWv1E-mKE/rs:fill:0:0:1/w:1400/h:1400/q:60/mb:500000/aHR0cHM6Ly9pbWct/dXBsb2FkLXByb2R1/Y3Rpb24udHJhbnNp/c3Rvci5mbS82NzUx/YjFjMjUyOTFjYjg5/YThhYmE1YzI1YzY3/OThhMy5wbmc.jpg"/>
      <itunes:duration>785</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>Eric and Todd check in on training, setbacks, and where things are at right now.</p><p>Eric shares how rethinking his heart rate approach has allowed him to start pushing intensity again. Todd talks through the cycle of trying to return to running and encountering the same knee issue tied to motor control on his left side.</p><p>They also touch on the early phase of Parkinson's after diagnosis, when you're still training, still functioning, and it doesn't always feel as serious as you expected.</p><p>Along the way, they reflect on recent conversations with other athletes living with Parkinson’s and how similar many of those early experiences can be.</p><p><strong>Key Takeaways</strong></p><p>➡️ You can keep pushing and get the same result every time.<br>Trying to run again keeps ending the same way, which means something else has to change.</p><p>➡️ Early on, it doesn’t always feel as serious as you expected.<br>When you’re still training and functioning well, it’s easy to think things might stay that way.</p><p>➡️ Physical training is only part of it.<br>Mindset and the people around you play just as big a role as what you’re doing physically.</p><p><strong>Key Moments</strong></p><p>00:00 – Training updates and current routines<br>02:30 – Running setbacks and knee issues<br>05:30 – Reflections since starting the podcast<br>06:30 – Early diagnosis experiences<br>08:30 – The early phase and shifting expectations<br>10:00 – Adjusting training vs pushing through<br>11:30 – Mental side and community</p><p><strong>About the Hosts</strong></p><p>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt are athletes living with Parkinson’s, sharing the day to day reality of training, adapting, and figuring it out as they go. Through honest conversations, they explore what helps, what does not, and how to keep moving forward with purpose.</p><p><strong>Follow / Connect</strong></p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br><strong>Disclaimer</strong></p><p>This podcast shares personal experience and general education, not medical advice. Always talk with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to medication, treatment, or exercise.</p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Parkinson’s disease, Parkinson’s podcast, Parkinson’s symptoms, Living with Parkinson’s, Parkinson’s for athletes, Training with Parkinson’s, Exercise for Parkinson’s, Mobility and balance training, Parkinson’s fatigue, Tremor management, Recovery strategies, Longevity and performance, Biohacking for Parkinson’s</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
      <podcast:transcript url="https://share.transistor.fm/s/edbb2ac3/transcript.txt" type="text/plain"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>How a Birthday Challenge Became a $43M Mission for Parkinson’s | Patrick Morrissey and Brendan Cusick</title>
      <itunes:episode>12</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>12</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>How a Birthday Challenge Became a $43M Mission for Parkinson’s | Patrick Morrissey and Brendan Cusick</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
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      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/4dc33c1c</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>Brendan Cusick wanted to do something big for his 50th birthday.</p><p>That idea led him to ocean rowing, a four-man team, and eventually a 2,800-mile row from Monterey to Kauai. Patrick Morrissey came into the picture as Brendan’s friend, a fellow endurance-minded athlete, and someone recently diagnosed with Parkinson’s who initially thought he might help as a spokesperson. A couple months later, he was on the team.</p><p>Eric and Todd talk with Patrick and Brendan about how the team came together, what the row asked of them physically and mentally, and how the mission took on a life beyond the boat.</p><p>They get into seasickness, sleep deprivation, medication, teamwork, and the growing sense that the crossing was no longer just about finishing in Hawaii. It had become something much larger, with families, supporters, and the Parkinson’s community invested in every mile.</p><p>What You’ll Hear</p><ul><li>How Brendan’s birthday challenge turned into a Pacific crossing</li><li>How Patrick went from possible spokesperson to full team member</li><li>What the row demanded physically and mentally once they were out there</li><li>How the team handled sleep deprivation, stress, and the daily rhythm of the boat</li><li>How the mission grew into something bigger than the four men rowing</li><li>How support from family, followers, and the Parkinson’s community became part of the effort</li></ul><p><br>Key Takeaways</p><p>➡️ The row became bigger than the original plan.<br>What started as a bold challenge between friends grew into a major fundraising effort for Parkinson’s research.</p><p>➡️ Teamwork carried the mission.<br>The crossing depended on trust, honesty, and knowing when one person needed the others to step in.</p><p>➡️ Endurance is not only physical.<br>A huge part of this episode is what sleep loss, stress, and uncertainty do to the mind over time.</p><p>➡️ Community changed the experience.<br>The people following along from home gave the team something bigger to pull for.</p><p>➡️ Parkinson’s should not shrink the picture of what is possible.<br>Patrick’s story pushed back on the idea that a diagnosis puts someone in a small box.</p><p>Key Moments</p><p>00:31 — Introduction to Patrick, Brendan, and the scale of the row<br>02:32 — How the team came together<br>08:20 — Patrick’s diagnosis, early involvement, and saying yes to the boat<br>12:59 — What training looked like leading into the row<br>14:18 — Two hours on, two hours off, and the reality of sleep<br>21:39 — The first week, big water, blisters, seasickness, and mental stress<br>28:40 — Finding rhythm after two difficult weeks<br>31:13 — The para anchor moment and realizing the row was bigger than the four of them<br>39:30 — Support from the Parkinson’s community and what it meant mid-row<br>42:35 — Landing in Hawaii and being met by family and the local Parkinson’s community<br>44:54 — Post-expedition blues, recovery, and what came next<br>48:16 — The next Human Powered Potential expedition<br>49:53 — Raising $43 million for The Michael J. Fox Foundation<br>54:08 — Race placement and redefining what an athlete with Parkinson’s can look like</p><p>About the Guests</p><p>Patrick Morrissey and Brendan Cusick are endurance athletes and co-founders of Human Powered Potential. In 2024, they were part of the four-man team that rowed 2,800 miles across the Pacific from California to Hawaii in 41 days, raising $43 million for The Michael J. Fox Foundation. Patrick, who lives with Parkinson’s, became the first person diagnosed with the disease to row the Pacific. Today, they continue that work through Human Powered Potential, building endurance events that raise funds for Parkinson’s research and challenge assumptions about what’s possible.</p><p>Learn more about Human Powered Potential</p><p>Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/humanpoweredpotential<br>Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/humanpoweredpotential</p><p>About the Hosts</p><p>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt are athletes living with Parkinson’s, sharing the day-to-day reality of training, adapting, and figuring it out as they go. Through honest conversations, they explore what helps, what does not, and how to keep moving forward with purpose.</p><p>Follow / Connect</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer</p><p>This podcast shares personal experience and general education, not medical advice. Always talk with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to medication, treatment, or exercise.</p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>Brendan Cusick wanted to do something big for his 50th birthday.</p><p>That idea led him to ocean rowing, a four-man team, and eventually a 2,800-mile row from Monterey to Kauai. Patrick Morrissey came into the picture as Brendan’s friend, a fellow endurance-minded athlete, and someone recently diagnosed with Parkinson’s who initially thought he might help as a spokesperson. A couple months later, he was on the team.</p><p>Eric and Todd talk with Patrick and Brendan about how the team came together, what the row asked of them physically and mentally, and how the mission took on a life beyond the boat.</p><p>They get into seasickness, sleep deprivation, medication, teamwork, and the growing sense that the crossing was no longer just about finishing in Hawaii. It had become something much larger, with families, supporters, and the Parkinson’s community invested in every mile.</p><p>What You’ll Hear</p><ul><li>How Brendan’s birthday challenge turned into a Pacific crossing</li><li>How Patrick went from possible spokesperson to full team member</li><li>What the row demanded physically and mentally once they were out there</li><li>How the team handled sleep deprivation, stress, and the daily rhythm of the boat</li><li>How the mission grew into something bigger than the four men rowing</li><li>How support from family, followers, and the Parkinson’s community became part of the effort</li></ul><p><br>Key Takeaways</p><p>➡️ The row became bigger than the original plan.<br>What started as a bold challenge between friends grew into a major fundraising effort for Parkinson’s research.</p><p>➡️ Teamwork carried the mission.<br>The crossing depended on trust, honesty, and knowing when one person needed the others to step in.</p><p>➡️ Endurance is not only physical.<br>A huge part of this episode is what sleep loss, stress, and uncertainty do to the mind over time.</p><p>➡️ Community changed the experience.<br>The people following along from home gave the team something bigger to pull for.</p><p>➡️ Parkinson’s should not shrink the picture of what is possible.<br>Patrick’s story pushed back on the idea that a diagnosis puts someone in a small box.</p><p>Key Moments</p><p>00:31 — Introduction to Patrick, Brendan, and the scale of the row<br>02:32 — How the team came together<br>08:20 — Patrick’s diagnosis, early involvement, and saying yes to the boat<br>12:59 — What training looked like leading into the row<br>14:18 — Two hours on, two hours off, and the reality of sleep<br>21:39 — The first week, big water, blisters, seasickness, and mental stress<br>28:40 — Finding rhythm after two difficult weeks<br>31:13 — The para anchor moment and realizing the row was bigger than the four of them<br>39:30 — Support from the Parkinson’s community and what it meant mid-row<br>42:35 — Landing in Hawaii and being met by family and the local Parkinson’s community<br>44:54 — Post-expedition blues, recovery, and what came next<br>48:16 — The next Human Powered Potential expedition<br>49:53 — Raising $43 million for The Michael J. Fox Foundation<br>54:08 — Race placement and redefining what an athlete with Parkinson’s can look like</p><p>About the Guests</p><p>Patrick Morrissey and Brendan Cusick are endurance athletes and co-founders of Human Powered Potential. In 2024, they were part of the four-man team that rowed 2,800 miles across the Pacific from California to Hawaii in 41 days, raising $43 million for The Michael J. Fox Foundation. Patrick, who lives with Parkinson’s, became the first person diagnosed with the disease to row the Pacific. Today, they continue that work through Human Powered Potential, building endurance events that raise funds for Parkinson’s research and challenge assumptions about what’s possible.</p><p>Learn more about Human Powered Potential</p><p>Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/humanpoweredpotential<br>Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/humanpoweredpotential</p><p>About the Hosts</p><p>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt are athletes living with Parkinson’s, sharing the day-to-day reality of training, adapting, and figuring it out as they go. Through honest conversations, they explore what helps, what does not, and how to keep moving forward with purpose.</p><p>Follow / Connect</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer</p><p>This podcast shares personal experience and general education, not medical advice. Always talk with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to medication, treatment, or exercise.</p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Wed, 01 Apr 2026 07:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
      <author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/4dc33c1c/1d2d49f9.mp3" length="59770951" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://img.transistorcdn.com/cyL6cfIUJoq0LNadbrg2KWFfnrcNW4FwAB-BDsGTjWY/rs:fill:0:0:1/w:1400/h:1400/q:60/mb:500000/aHR0cHM6Ly9pbWct/dXBsb2FkLXByb2R1/Y3Rpb24udHJhbnNp/c3Rvci5mbS8wNzMw/YmQwNWJhYjgwZjA4/NjlhZjJhM2Y1Mzc4/NjllOS5wbmc.jpg"/>
      <itunes:duration>3732</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>Brendan Cusick wanted to do something big for his 50th birthday.</p><p>That idea led him to ocean rowing, a four-man team, and eventually a 2,800-mile row from Monterey to Kauai. Patrick Morrissey came into the picture as Brendan’s friend, a fellow endurance-minded athlete, and someone recently diagnosed with Parkinson’s who initially thought he might help as a spokesperson. A couple months later, he was on the team.</p><p>Eric and Todd talk with Patrick and Brendan about how the team came together, what the row asked of them physically and mentally, and how the mission took on a life beyond the boat.</p><p>They get into seasickness, sleep deprivation, medication, teamwork, and the growing sense that the crossing was no longer just about finishing in Hawaii. It had become something much larger, with families, supporters, and the Parkinson’s community invested in every mile.</p><p>What You’ll Hear</p><ul><li>How Brendan’s birthday challenge turned into a Pacific crossing</li><li>How Patrick went from possible spokesperson to full team member</li><li>What the row demanded physically and mentally once they were out there</li><li>How the team handled sleep deprivation, stress, and the daily rhythm of the boat</li><li>How the mission grew into something bigger than the four men rowing</li><li>How support from family, followers, and the Parkinson’s community became part of the effort</li></ul><p><br>Key Takeaways</p><p>➡️ The row became bigger than the original plan.<br>What started as a bold challenge between friends grew into a major fundraising effort for Parkinson’s research.</p><p>➡️ Teamwork carried the mission.<br>The crossing depended on trust, honesty, and knowing when one person needed the others to step in.</p><p>➡️ Endurance is not only physical.<br>A huge part of this episode is what sleep loss, stress, and uncertainty do to the mind over time.</p><p>➡️ Community changed the experience.<br>The people following along from home gave the team something bigger to pull for.</p><p>➡️ Parkinson’s should not shrink the picture of what is possible.<br>Patrick’s story pushed back on the idea that a diagnosis puts someone in a small box.</p><p>Key Moments</p><p>00:31 — Introduction to Patrick, Brendan, and the scale of the row<br>02:32 — How the team came together<br>08:20 — Patrick’s diagnosis, early involvement, and saying yes to the boat<br>12:59 — What training looked like leading into the row<br>14:18 — Two hours on, two hours off, and the reality of sleep<br>21:39 — The first week, big water, blisters, seasickness, and mental stress<br>28:40 — Finding rhythm after two difficult weeks<br>31:13 — The para anchor moment and realizing the row was bigger than the four of them<br>39:30 — Support from the Parkinson’s community and what it meant mid-row<br>42:35 — Landing in Hawaii and being met by family and the local Parkinson’s community<br>44:54 — Post-expedition blues, recovery, and what came next<br>48:16 — The next Human Powered Potential expedition<br>49:53 — Raising $43 million for The Michael J. Fox Foundation<br>54:08 — Race placement and redefining what an athlete with Parkinson’s can look like</p><p>About the Guests</p><p>Patrick Morrissey and Brendan Cusick are endurance athletes and co-founders of Human Powered Potential. In 2024, they were part of the four-man team that rowed 2,800 miles across the Pacific from California to Hawaii in 41 days, raising $43 million for The Michael J. Fox Foundation. Patrick, who lives with Parkinson’s, became the first person diagnosed with the disease to row the Pacific. Today, they continue that work through Human Powered Potential, building endurance events that raise funds for Parkinson’s research and challenge assumptions about what’s possible.</p><p>Learn more about Human Powered Potential</p><p>Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/humanpoweredpotential<br>Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/humanpoweredpotential</p><p>About the Hosts</p><p>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt are athletes living with Parkinson’s, sharing the day-to-day reality of training, adapting, and figuring it out as they go. Through honest conversations, they explore what helps, what does not, and how to keep moving forward with purpose.</p><p>Follow / Connect</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer</p><p>This podcast shares personal experience and general education, not medical advice. Always talk with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to medication, treatment, or exercise.</p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Parkinson’s disease, Parkinson’s podcast, Parkinson’s symptoms, Living with Parkinson’s, Parkinson’s for athletes, Training with Parkinson’s, Exercise for Parkinson’s, Mobility and balance training, Parkinson’s fatigue, Tremor management, Recovery strategies, Longevity and performance, Biohacking for Parkinson’s</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>Yes</itunes:explicit>
      <podcast:transcript url="https://share.transistor.fm/s/4dc33c1c/transcript.txt" type="text/plain"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>You Don’t Conquer the Mountain in a Day | Mike McCastle</title>
      <itunes:episode>11</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>11</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>You Don’t Conquer the Mountain in a Day | Mike McCastle</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">bdff341a-972a-497b-bf63-d7b7eddc51b9</guid>
      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/0588cde6</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>Mike McCastle doesn’t talk about strength the way most people do.</p><p>His definition of strength was shaped by watching his dad live with Parkinson’s. Watching the effort, patience, and composure it took to get through everyday moments most people barely think about.</p><p>That stayed with him.</p><p>It also inspired the Twelve Labors Project, Mike’s mission to take on a series of extreme endurance and strength challenges in honor of his father’s life with Parkinson’s.</p><p>The scale of it is hard to miss. World records. Long efforts. Hard things stacked on hard things.</p><p>But Mike does not talk about those efforts like stunts. He talks about them as a way to honor what he saw his father carry for years.</p><p>Eric and Todd talk with Mike about endurance, failure, and how quickly a challenge can feel too big when your mind gets out ahead of you. They get into a failed pull-up world record attempt, what it took to come back from it, and the habit of breaking hard things down before they swallow you whole.</p><p>You do not conquer the mountain in a day.</p><p>You win the morning. You take the next step. You stay with what is in front of you.</p><p>That applies to training. It applies to Parkinson’s. It applies to any stretch where progress is uneven and your body or mind is not cooperating.</p><p>What You’ll Hear</p><ul><li>Why Mike built the Twelve Labors Project around his father’s experience with Parkinson’s</li><li>What failure taught him after a pull-up record attempt fell apart</li><li>Why “win the morning” is more useful than thinking too far ahead</li><li>How he handles bad training days without turning them into zero days</li><li>What he learned from watching his dad carry himself in public</li><li>Why community matters, even for athletes who are used to doing hard things alone</li></ul><p><br>Key Takeaways</p><p>➡️ You don’t conquer the mountain in a day.<br>Big things get handled in small pieces. The next step matters more than the full picture.</p><p>➡️ Strength shows up in the response.<br>Not when things are easy. When they’re slow, frustrating, or out of your control.</p><p>➡️ Resilience can be trained.<br>Through repetition, pressure, and learning how to stay with the moment.</p><p>➡️ Bad days still count.<br>Doing something is different than doing nothing.</p><p>Key Moments</p><p>00:00 — Introduction<br>00:30 — The Twelve Labors Project and where it came from<br>02:00 — Parkinson’s, fatherhood, and what kids absorb<br>03:00 — First labor: 50K with a weighted pack<br>04:30 — “Win the morning”<br>07:00 — Failed pull-up world record attempt<br>08:30 — “The brain is a liar”<br>10:30 — Staying in the moment under pressure<br>21:00 — Completing a labor after his father passed<br>22:00 — The bank story<br>24:00 — Caretaking as a teenager<br>26:30 — Fatherhood and example<br>38:00 — What to do on bad days<br>45:00 — Community and support<br>49:30 — Closing reflections</p><p>About the Guest</p><p>Mike McCastle is a U.S. Navy veteran, 7-time world record-setting endurance athlete, and founder of the <strong>Twelve Labors Project</strong>, a long-running mission built around extreme feats of strength and endurance.</p><p>He has a background in sport psychology and works as a mental strength coach, personal trainer, USA Weightlifting coach, and Rock Steady Boxing coach. His work focuses on helping people build physical capacity and mental durability under pressure.</p><p>The Twelve Labors Project was inspired in part by his father’s experience with Parkinson’s, and that connection runs through the way Mike thinks about resilience, discipline, and what strength actually looks like.</p><p><br>Follow / Connect</p><p>Instagram: @mikemccastle<br>Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/michael.mccastle<br>LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mikemccastle</p><p>About the Hosts</p><p>Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich are athletes living with Parkinson’s who share what they’re learning in real time: what helps, what doesn’t, and how to keep adapting.</p><p>Follow / Connect</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer</p><p>This podcast shares personal experience and general education, not medical advice. Always talk with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to medication, treatment, or exercise.</p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>Mike McCastle doesn’t talk about strength the way most people do.</p><p>His definition of strength was shaped by watching his dad live with Parkinson’s. Watching the effort, patience, and composure it took to get through everyday moments most people barely think about.</p><p>That stayed with him.</p><p>It also inspired the Twelve Labors Project, Mike’s mission to take on a series of extreme endurance and strength challenges in honor of his father’s life with Parkinson’s.</p><p>The scale of it is hard to miss. World records. Long efforts. Hard things stacked on hard things.</p><p>But Mike does not talk about those efforts like stunts. He talks about them as a way to honor what he saw his father carry for years.</p><p>Eric and Todd talk with Mike about endurance, failure, and how quickly a challenge can feel too big when your mind gets out ahead of you. They get into a failed pull-up world record attempt, what it took to come back from it, and the habit of breaking hard things down before they swallow you whole.</p><p>You do not conquer the mountain in a day.</p><p>You win the morning. You take the next step. You stay with what is in front of you.</p><p>That applies to training. It applies to Parkinson’s. It applies to any stretch where progress is uneven and your body or mind is not cooperating.</p><p>What You’ll Hear</p><ul><li>Why Mike built the Twelve Labors Project around his father’s experience with Parkinson’s</li><li>What failure taught him after a pull-up record attempt fell apart</li><li>Why “win the morning” is more useful than thinking too far ahead</li><li>How he handles bad training days without turning them into zero days</li><li>What he learned from watching his dad carry himself in public</li><li>Why community matters, even for athletes who are used to doing hard things alone</li></ul><p><br>Key Takeaways</p><p>➡️ You don’t conquer the mountain in a day.<br>Big things get handled in small pieces. The next step matters more than the full picture.</p><p>➡️ Strength shows up in the response.<br>Not when things are easy. When they’re slow, frustrating, or out of your control.</p><p>➡️ Resilience can be trained.<br>Through repetition, pressure, and learning how to stay with the moment.</p><p>➡️ Bad days still count.<br>Doing something is different than doing nothing.</p><p>Key Moments</p><p>00:00 — Introduction<br>00:30 — The Twelve Labors Project and where it came from<br>02:00 — Parkinson’s, fatherhood, and what kids absorb<br>03:00 — First labor: 50K with a weighted pack<br>04:30 — “Win the morning”<br>07:00 — Failed pull-up world record attempt<br>08:30 — “The brain is a liar”<br>10:30 — Staying in the moment under pressure<br>21:00 — Completing a labor after his father passed<br>22:00 — The bank story<br>24:00 — Caretaking as a teenager<br>26:30 — Fatherhood and example<br>38:00 — What to do on bad days<br>45:00 — Community and support<br>49:30 — Closing reflections</p><p>About the Guest</p><p>Mike McCastle is a U.S. Navy veteran, 7-time world record-setting endurance athlete, and founder of the <strong>Twelve Labors Project</strong>, a long-running mission built around extreme feats of strength and endurance.</p><p>He has a background in sport psychology and works as a mental strength coach, personal trainer, USA Weightlifting coach, and Rock Steady Boxing coach. His work focuses on helping people build physical capacity and mental durability under pressure.</p><p>The Twelve Labors Project was inspired in part by his father’s experience with Parkinson’s, and that connection runs through the way Mike thinks about resilience, discipline, and what strength actually looks like.</p><p><br>Follow / Connect</p><p>Instagram: @mikemccastle<br>Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/michael.mccastle<br>LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mikemccastle</p><p>About the Hosts</p><p>Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich are athletes living with Parkinson’s who share what they’re learning in real time: what helps, what doesn’t, and how to keep adapting.</p><p>Follow / Connect</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer</p><p>This podcast shares personal experience and general education, not medical advice. Always talk with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to medication, treatment, or exercise.</p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Wed, 25 Mar 2026 08:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
      <author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/0588cde6/3be4980e.mp3" length="50897168" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://img.transistorcdn.com/RKgtW0c3AgmdW7QFDOrtXRSUwZ0-zX5lWWEB-PhMDKw/rs:fill:0:0:1/w:1400/h:1400/q:60/mb:500000/aHR0cHM6Ly9pbWct/dXBsb2FkLXByb2R1/Y3Rpb24udHJhbnNp/c3Rvci5mbS8yMmYx/NDdjZDA1OWVlZjNm/NzVlODE2ZjE4ODY3/ZmU2NC5wbmc.jpg"/>
      <itunes:duration>3177</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>Mike McCastle doesn’t talk about strength the way most people do.</p><p>His definition of strength was shaped by watching his dad live with Parkinson’s. Watching the effort, patience, and composure it took to get through everyday moments most people barely think about.</p><p>That stayed with him.</p><p>It also inspired the Twelve Labors Project, Mike’s mission to take on a series of extreme endurance and strength challenges in honor of his father’s life with Parkinson’s.</p><p>The scale of it is hard to miss. World records. Long efforts. Hard things stacked on hard things.</p><p>But Mike does not talk about those efforts like stunts. He talks about them as a way to honor what he saw his father carry for years.</p><p>Eric and Todd talk with Mike about endurance, failure, and how quickly a challenge can feel too big when your mind gets out ahead of you. They get into a failed pull-up world record attempt, what it took to come back from it, and the habit of breaking hard things down before they swallow you whole.</p><p>You do not conquer the mountain in a day.</p><p>You win the morning. You take the next step. You stay with what is in front of you.</p><p>That applies to training. It applies to Parkinson’s. It applies to any stretch where progress is uneven and your body or mind is not cooperating.</p><p>What You’ll Hear</p><ul><li>Why Mike built the Twelve Labors Project around his father’s experience with Parkinson’s</li><li>What failure taught him after a pull-up record attempt fell apart</li><li>Why “win the morning” is more useful than thinking too far ahead</li><li>How he handles bad training days without turning them into zero days</li><li>What he learned from watching his dad carry himself in public</li><li>Why community matters, even for athletes who are used to doing hard things alone</li></ul><p><br>Key Takeaways</p><p>➡️ You don’t conquer the mountain in a day.<br>Big things get handled in small pieces. The next step matters more than the full picture.</p><p>➡️ Strength shows up in the response.<br>Not when things are easy. When they’re slow, frustrating, or out of your control.</p><p>➡️ Resilience can be trained.<br>Through repetition, pressure, and learning how to stay with the moment.</p><p>➡️ Bad days still count.<br>Doing something is different than doing nothing.</p><p>Key Moments</p><p>00:00 — Introduction<br>00:30 — The Twelve Labors Project and where it came from<br>02:00 — Parkinson’s, fatherhood, and what kids absorb<br>03:00 — First labor: 50K with a weighted pack<br>04:30 — “Win the morning”<br>07:00 — Failed pull-up world record attempt<br>08:30 — “The brain is a liar”<br>10:30 — Staying in the moment under pressure<br>21:00 — Completing a labor after his father passed<br>22:00 — The bank story<br>24:00 — Caretaking as a teenager<br>26:30 — Fatherhood and example<br>38:00 — What to do on bad days<br>45:00 — Community and support<br>49:30 — Closing reflections</p><p>About the Guest</p><p>Mike McCastle is a U.S. Navy veteran, 7-time world record-setting endurance athlete, and founder of the <strong>Twelve Labors Project</strong>, a long-running mission built around extreme feats of strength and endurance.</p><p>He has a background in sport psychology and works as a mental strength coach, personal trainer, USA Weightlifting coach, and Rock Steady Boxing coach. His work focuses on helping people build physical capacity and mental durability under pressure.</p><p>The Twelve Labors Project was inspired in part by his father’s experience with Parkinson’s, and that connection runs through the way Mike thinks about resilience, discipline, and what strength actually looks like.</p><p><br>Follow / Connect</p><p>Instagram: @mikemccastle<br>Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/michael.mccastle<br>LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mikemccastle</p><p>About the Hosts</p><p>Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich are athletes living with Parkinson’s who share what they’re learning in real time: what helps, what doesn’t, and how to keep adapting.</p><p>Follow / Connect</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer</p><p>This podcast shares personal experience and general education, not medical advice. Always talk with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to medication, treatment, or exercise.</p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Parkinson’s disease, Parkinson’s podcast, Parkinson’s symptoms, Living with Parkinson’s, Parkinson’s for athletes, Training with Parkinson’s, Exercise for Parkinson’s, Mobility and balance training, Parkinson’s fatigue, Tremor management, Recovery strategies, Longevity and performance, Biohacking for Parkinson’s</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
      <podcast:transcript url="https://share.transistor.fm/s/0588cde6/transcript.txt" type="text/plain"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>There Are No Shortcuts with Parkinson’s | Jimmy Choi</title>
      <itunes:episode>10</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>10</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>There Are No Shortcuts with Parkinson’s | Jimmy Choi</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">96234421-c162-4d4b-9fc2-8740ab842eae</guid>
      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/26826522</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>Jimmy Choi is known for doing things most people do not associate with Parkinson’s. Ultramarathons. Triathlons. American Ninja Warrior. World records.</p><p>What comes through in this conversation is everything underneath that.</p><p>Jimmy talks openly about the years after his diagnosis, when depression, apathy, and anger took over. He shares the reality of trying to live with a progressive disease, and the slow, unglamorous work of changing his life over time.</p><p>Eric and Todd talk with Jimmy about exercise, mental health, medication, daily routines, and why he believes there are no shortcuts to living well with Parkinson’s. They also get into the gap between what people see from the outside and what it actually takes to manage this disease day after day.</p><p>➡️ Content note: This conversation includes discussion of depression, suicide, and the mental health side of Parkinson’s. We’re grateful to Jimmy for speaking so openly. Please take care while listening and reach out for support if needed.</p><p><br>Key Takeaways:</p><ul><li><strong>The mental side of Parkinson’s can be as hard as the physical side.</strong><br> Jimmy speaks candidly about depression, apathy, and the importance of getting help and talking more openly about mental health, especially for men.<p></p></li><li><strong>There are no shortcuts.</strong><br> Jimmy has a clear message for people looking for a quick fix. Learn your body. Track what helps. Pay attention to medication, food, exercise, and recovery. Put in the work over time.<p></p></li><li><strong>What people see is only part of it.</strong><br> Jimmy is open about the difference between how he functions on medication and how hard he has worked to build routines around movement, nutrition, and training.</li></ul><p><br>Key Moments:</p><p>00:00 — Introduction<br>01:15 — Jimmy’s diagnosis and athletic accomplishments<br>04:00 — Early symptoms and Young-Onset Parkinson’s<br>07:00 — Family, relationships, and life after diagnosis<br>08:40 — Mental health, depression, and turning points<br>16:00 — Parkinson’s as an endurance event<br>23:00 — Identity, perspective, and personal growth<br>27:00 — The moment that sparked lifestyle change<br>29:30 — The 10% rule and building momentum<br>31:30 — Training for American Ninja Warrior<br>35:00 — Showing what’s possible with Parkinson’s<br>39:00 — Medication tracking and personal routines<br>46:00 — Rigidity, dystonia, and daily variability<br>50:30 — A day in Jimmy’s life with Parkinson’s<br>55:00 — Why there are no shortcuts<br>1:03:00 — Mental health and community support</p><p><br>About the Guest:</p><p>Jimmy Choi is an endurance athlete, Guinness World Records title holder, and one of the most recognizable athlete-advocates in the Parkinson’s community. Diagnosed with Young-Onset Parkinson’s disease in 2003 at age 27, Jimmy spent years in denial before a wake-up call in 2010 pushed him to fully overhaul his lifestyle and commit to the work of living well with Parkinson’s. At the time, he was walking with a cane and weighed 250 pounds.</p><p>Since then, Jimmy has become a competitive ultramarathoner, cyclist, and triathlete. He was the first person with Parkinson’s on record to complete a 100-mile bike ride in under five hours and has competed on multiple seasons of NBC’s American Ninja Warrior. He uses his platform to challenge assumptions about what’s possible with Parkinson’s while remaining honest about the realities of both on and off days.</p><p>Beyond performance, Jimmy is deeply committed to advocacy and research. He has participated in clinical trials, supports fundraising efforts through Team Fox and The Michael J. Fox Foundation, and serves in advisory roles within the Parkinson’s community.</p><p><br>Connect with Jimmy:</p><p>Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jcfoxninja</p><p><br>About the Hosts:</p><p>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt are athletes living with Parkinson’s, sharing the day-to-day reality of training, adapting, and figuring it out as they go. Through honest conversations, they explore what helps, what doesn’t, and how to keep moving forward with purpose.</p><p>Follow / connect:</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer:</p><p>This podcast contains personal experience and education only, not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical decisions.</p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>Jimmy Choi is known for doing things most people do not associate with Parkinson’s. Ultramarathons. Triathlons. American Ninja Warrior. World records.</p><p>What comes through in this conversation is everything underneath that.</p><p>Jimmy talks openly about the years after his diagnosis, when depression, apathy, and anger took over. He shares the reality of trying to live with a progressive disease, and the slow, unglamorous work of changing his life over time.</p><p>Eric and Todd talk with Jimmy about exercise, mental health, medication, daily routines, and why he believes there are no shortcuts to living well with Parkinson’s. They also get into the gap between what people see from the outside and what it actually takes to manage this disease day after day.</p><p>➡️ Content note: This conversation includes discussion of depression, suicide, and the mental health side of Parkinson’s. We’re grateful to Jimmy for speaking so openly. Please take care while listening and reach out for support if needed.</p><p><br>Key Takeaways:</p><ul><li><strong>The mental side of Parkinson’s can be as hard as the physical side.</strong><br> Jimmy speaks candidly about depression, apathy, and the importance of getting help and talking more openly about mental health, especially for men.<p></p></li><li><strong>There are no shortcuts.</strong><br> Jimmy has a clear message for people looking for a quick fix. Learn your body. Track what helps. Pay attention to medication, food, exercise, and recovery. Put in the work over time.<p></p></li><li><strong>What people see is only part of it.</strong><br> Jimmy is open about the difference between how he functions on medication and how hard he has worked to build routines around movement, nutrition, and training.</li></ul><p><br>Key Moments:</p><p>00:00 — Introduction<br>01:15 — Jimmy’s diagnosis and athletic accomplishments<br>04:00 — Early symptoms and Young-Onset Parkinson’s<br>07:00 — Family, relationships, and life after diagnosis<br>08:40 — Mental health, depression, and turning points<br>16:00 — Parkinson’s as an endurance event<br>23:00 — Identity, perspective, and personal growth<br>27:00 — The moment that sparked lifestyle change<br>29:30 — The 10% rule and building momentum<br>31:30 — Training for American Ninja Warrior<br>35:00 — Showing what’s possible with Parkinson’s<br>39:00 — Medication tracking and personal routines<br>46:00 — Rigidity, dystonia, and daily variability<br>50:30 — A day in Jimmy’s life with Parkinson’s<br>55:00 — Why there are no shortcuts<br>1:03:00 — Mental health and community support</p><p><br>About the Guest:</p><p>Jimmy Choi is an endurance athlete, Guinness World Records title holder, and one of the most recognizable athlete-advocates in the Parkinson’s community. Diagnosed with Young-Onset Parkinson’s disease in 2003 at age 27, Jimmy spent years in denial before a wake-up call in 2010 pushed him to fully overhaul his lifestyle and commit to the work of living well with Parkinson’s. At the time, he was walking with a cane and weighed 250 pounds.</p><p>Since then, Jimmy has become a competitive ultramarathoner, cyclist, and triathlete. He was the first person with Parkinson’s on record to complete a 100-mile bike ride in under five hours and has competed on multiple seasons of NBC’s American Ninja Warrior. He uses his platform to challenge assumptions about what’s possible with Parkinson’s while remaining honest about the realities of both on and off days.</p><p>Beyond performance, Jimmy is deeply committed to advocacy and research. He has participated in clinical trials, supports fundraising efforts through Team Fox and The Michael J. Fox Foundation, and serves in advisory roles within the Parkinson’s community.</p><p><br>Connect with Jimmy:</p><p>Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jcfoxninja</p><p><br>About the Hosts:</p><p>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt are athletes living with Parkinson’s, sharing the day-to-day reality of training, adapting, and figuring it out as they go. Through honest conversations, they explore what helps, what doesn’t, and how to keep moving forward with purpose.</p><p>Follow / connect:</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer:</p><p>This podcast contains personal experience and education only, not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical decisions.</p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Wed, 18 Mar 2026 08:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
      <author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/26826522/c9c2ae77.mp3" length="32060249" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://img.transistorcdn.com/qCNxTEi_5ux7xmKXIRTHfP1Bc3f2PMbp1EfanN_-AmI/rs:fill:0:0:1/w:1400/h:1400/q:60/mb:500000/aHR0cHM6Ly9pbWct/dXBsb2FkLXByb2R1/Y3Rpb24udHJhbnNp/c3Rvci5mbS9kNDJm/Yjk5OWFmZTliNTBl/NTYyODRlY2IwZmE4/NTZiMy5wbmc.jpg"/>
      <itunes:duration>4001</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>Jimmy Choi is known for doing things most people do not associate with Parkinson’s. Ultramarathons. Triathlons. American Ninja Warrior. World records.</p><p>What comes through in this conversation is everything underneath that.</p><p>Jimmy talks openly about the years after his diagnosis, when depression, apathy, and anger took over. He shares the reality of trying to live with a progressive disease, and the slow, unglamorous work of changing his life over time.</p><p>Eric and Todd talk with Jimmy about exercise, mental health, medication, daily routines, and why he believes there are no shortcuts to living well with Parkinson’s. They also get into the gap between what people see from the outside and what it actually takes to manage this disease day after day.</p><p>➡️ Content note: This conversation includes discussion of depression, suicide, and the mental health side of Parkinson’s. We’re grateful to Jimmy for speaking so openly. Please take care while listening and reach out for support if needed.</p><p><br>Key Takeaways:</p><ul><li><strong>The mental side of Parkinson’s can be as hard as the physical side.</strong><br> Jimmy speaks candidly about depression, apathy, and the importance of getting help and talking more openly about mental health, especially for men.<p></p></li><li><strong>There are no shortcuts.</strong><br> Jimmy has a clear message for people looking for a quick fix. Learn your body. Track what helps. Pay attention to medication, food, exercise, and recovery. Put in the work over time.<p></p></li><li><strong>What people see is only part of it.</strong><br> Jimmy is open about the difference between how he functions on medication and how hard he has worked to build routines around movement, nutrition, and training.</li></ul><p><br>Key Moments:</p><p>00:00 — Introduction<br>01:15 — Jimmy’s diagnosis and athletic accomplishments<br>04:00 — Early symptoms and Young-Onset Parkinson’s<br>07:00 — Family, relationships, and life after diagnosis<br>08:40 — Mental health, depression, and turning points<br>16:00 — Parkinson’s as an endurance event<br>23:00 — Identity, perspective, and personal growth<br>27:00 — The moment that sparked lifestyle change<br>29:30 — The 10% rule and building momentum<br>31:30 — Training for American Ninja Warrior<br>35:00 — Showing what’s possible with Parkinson’s<br>39:00 — Medication tracking and personal routines<br>46:00 — Rigidity, dystonia, and daily variability<br>50:30 — A day in Jimmy’s life with Parkinson’s<br>55:00 — Why there are no shortcuts<br>1:03:00 — Mental health and community support</p><p><br>About the Guest:</p><p>Jimmy Choi is an endurance athlete, Guinness World Records title holder, and one of the most recognizable athlete-advocates in the Parkinson’s community. Diagnosed with Young-Onset Parkinson’s disease in 2003 at age 27, Jimmy spent years in denial before a wake-up call in 2010 pushed him to fully overhaul his lifestyle and commit to the work of living well with Parkinson’s. At the time, he was walking with a cane and weighed 250 pounds.</p><p>Since then, Jimmy has become a competitive ultramarathoner, cyclist, and triathlete. He was the first person with Parkinson’s on record to complete a 100-mile bike ride in under five hours and has competed on multiple seasons of NBC’s American Ninja Warrior. He uses his platform to challenge assumptions about what’s possible with Parkinson’s while remaining honest about the realities of both on and off days.</p><p>Beyond performance, Jimmy is deeply committed to advocacy and research. He has participated in clinical trials, supports fundraising efforts through Team Fox and The Michael J. Fox Foundation, and serves in advisory roles within the Parkinson’s community.</p><p><br>Connect with Jimmy:</p><p>Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jcfoxninja</p><p><br>About the Hosts:</p><p>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt are athletes living with Parkinson’s, sharing the day-to-day reality of training, adapting, and figuring it out as they go. Through honest conversations, they explore what helps, what doesn’t, and how to keep moving forward with purpose.</p><p>Follow / connect:</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer:</p><p>This podcast contains personal experience and education only, not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical decisions.</p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Parkinson’s disease, Parkinson’s podcast, Parkinson’s symptoms, Living with Parkinson’s, Parkinson’s for athletes, Training with Parkinson’s, Exercise for Parkinson’s, Mobility and balance training, Parkinson’s fatigue, Tremor management, Recovery strategies, Longevity and performance, Biohacking for Parkinson’s</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>Yes</itunes:explicit>
      <podcast:transcript url="https://share.transistor.fm/s/26826522/transcript.txt" type="text/plain"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Why Exercise Works Like Medicine for Parkinson’s | Julie Hershberg</title>
      <itunes:episode>9</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>9</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>Why Exercise Works Like Medicine for Parkinson’s | Julie Hershberg</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">6fd32b32-a79c-4608-93ca-5e5386024a37</guid>
      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/8b981c9b</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>Parkinson’s changes how the brain controls movement. But movement can also change the brain. </p><p>In this episode, Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich sit down with Julie Hershberg, neurological physical therapist and founder of re+active therapy &amp; wellness, to talk about why exercise may be one of the most powerful tools we have for living with Parkinson’s. They get into neuroplasticity, symptom variability, training the nervous system, and what it means to adapt when the body does not always respond the same way twice.</p><p>This conversation is about learning to work with what is there, train what is possible, and keep moving with purpose.</p><p>Key Takeaways:</p><ul><li>Exercise can support brain change, not just physical fitness</li><li>Parkinson’s requires adaptable training because symptoms vary</li><li>Progress starts with working from what is real, not what is ideal</li></ul><p><br>Key Moments:</p><p><strong>00:00</strong> Introduction to Julie Hershberg and re+active therapy &amp; wellness<br> <strong>03:40</strong> Why exercise matters so much in Parkinson’s<br> <strong>08:15</strong> Neuroplasticity and how movement affects the brain<br> <strong>13:35</strong> Training the nervous system, not just the muscles<br> <strong>18:20</strong> Symptom variability and adapting day to day<br> <strong>23:10</strong> How athletes approach Parkinson’s differently<br> <strong>28:00</strong> Why meaningful movement works better than going through the motions<br> <strong>33:10</strong> Working with what is there, not what you wish was there<br> <strong>38:00</strong> Final thoughts on training, adaptation, and purpose</p><p>About the Guest:</p><p>Julie Hershberg is a neurological physical therapist and founder of <strong>re+active therapy &amp; wellness</strong>, where she helps people with Parkinson’s and other neurologic conditions rebuild trust in their bodies and nervous systems, while keeping movement creative, challenging, and fun.</p><p>She is passionate about interdisciplinary care, creative movement, and helping people return to the activities that make life meaningful.</p><p>Connect with Julie:</p><p>Website: <a href="https://www.reactivept.com">https://www.reactivept.com</a></p><p>LinkedIn: <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/julie-hershberg-pt-dpt-ncs-40481545/">https://www.linkedin.com/in/julie-hershberg-pt-dpt-ncs-40481545/</a></p><p>Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/reactivept/">https://www.instagram.com/reactivept/</a></p><p>Facebook: <a href="https://www.facebook.com/neurologicptlosangeles">https://www.facebook.com/neurologicptlosangeles</a></p><p>YouTube: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/@reactivept">https://www.youtube.com/@reactivept</a></p><p>TikTok: <a href="https://www.tiktok.com/@reactivetherapy">https://www.tiktok.com/@reactivetherapy</a></p><p>About the hosts:</p><p>Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich are athletes living with Parkinson’s who share what they’re learning in real time: what’s working, what’s frustrating, and how to keep moving forward with an athlete’s mindset.</p><p>Follow / connect:</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer:</p><p>This podcast contains personal experience and education only, not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical decisions.</p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>Parkinson’s changes how the brain controls movement. But movement can also change the brain. </p><p>In this episode, Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich sit down with Julie Hershberg, neurological physical therapist and founder of re+active therapy &amp; wellness, to talk about why exercise may be one of the most powerful tools we have for living with Parkinson’s. They get into neuroplasticity, symptom variability, training the nervous system, and what it means to adapt when the body does not always respond the same way twice.</p><p>This conversation is about learning to work with what is there, train what is possible, and keep moving with purpose.</p><p>Key Takeaways:</p><ul><li>Exercise can support brain change, not just physical fitness</li><li>Parkinson’s requires adaptable training because symptoms vary</li><li>Progress starts with working from what is real, not what is ideal</li></ul><p><br>Key Moments:</p><p><strong>00:00</strong> Introduction to Julie Hershberg and re+active therapy &amp; wellness<br> <strong>03:40</strong> Why exercise matters so much in Parkinson’s<br> <strong>08:15</strong> Neuroplasticity and how movement affects the brain<br> <strong>13:35</strong> Training the nervous system, not just the muscles<br> <strong>18:20</strong> Symptom variability and adapting day to day<br> <strong>23:10</strong> How athletes approach Parkinson’s differently<br> <strong>28:00</strong> Why meaningful movement works better than going through the motions<br> <strong>33:10</strong> Working with what is there, not what you wish was there<br> <strong>38:00</strong> Final thoughts on training, adaptation, and purpose</p><p>About the Guest:</p><p>Julie Hershberg is a neurological physical therapist and founder of <strong>re+active therapy &amp; wellness</strong>, where she helps people with Parkinson’s and other neurologic conditions rebuild trust in their bodies and nervous systems, while keeping movement creative, challenging, and fun.</p><p>She is passionate about interdisciplinary care, creative movement, and helping people return to the activities that make life meaningful.</p><p>Connect with Julie:</p><p>Website: <a href="https://www.reactivept.com">https://www.reactivept.com</a></p><p>LinkedIn: <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/julie-hershberg-pt-dpt-ncs-40481545/">https://www.linkedin.com/in/julie-hershberg-pt-dpt-ncs-40481545/</a></p><p>Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/reactivept/">https://www.instagram.com/reactivept/</a></p><p>Facebook: <a href="https://www.facebook.com/neurologicptlosangeles">https://www.facebook.com/neurologicptlosangeles</a></p><p>YouTube: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/@reactivept">https://www.youtube.com/@reactivept</a></p><p>TikTok: <a href="https://www.tiktok.com/@reactivetherapy">https://www.tiktok.com/@reactivetherapy</a></p><p>About the hosts:</p><p>Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich are athletes living with Parkinson’s who share what they’re learning in real time: what’s working, what’s frustrating, and how to keep moving forward with an athlete’s mindset.</p><p>Follow / connect:</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer:</p><p>This podcast contains personal experience and education only, not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical decisions.</p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Wed, 11 Mar 2026 08:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
      <author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/8b981c9b/e553ac52.mp3" length="27141657" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://img.transistorcdn.com/awsly_gNnGhZn5AGcTNGIVBQiwROfuAF-3vItAIPDOo/rs:fill:0:0:1/w:1400/h:1400/q:60/mb:500000/aHR0cHM6Ly9pbWct/dXBsb2FkLXByb2R1/Y3Rpb24udHJhbnNp/c3Rvci5mbS9iNWFi/NjdmZjQ0YTc5ZDk5/ZDEzZDkyZjA4N2Jj/OTk0Yy5wbmc.jpg"/>
      <itunes:duration>3385</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>Parkinson’s changes how the brain controls movement. But movement can also change the brain. </p><p>In this episode, Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich sit down with Julie Hershberg, neurological physical therapist and founder of re+active therapy &amp; wellness, to talk about why exercise may be one of the most powerful tools we have for living with Parkinson’s. They get into neuroplasticity, symptom variability, training the nervous system, and what it means to adapt when the body does not always respond the same way twice.</p><p>This conversation is about learning to work with what is there, train what is possible, and keep moving with purpose.</p><p>Key Takeaways:</p><ul><li>Exercise can support brain change, not just physical fitness</li><li>Parkinson’s requires adaptable training because symptoms vary</li><li>Progress starts with working from what is real, not what is ideal</li></ul><p><br>Key Moments:</p><p><strong>00:00</strong> Introduction to Julie Hershberg and re+active therapy &amp; wellness<br> <strong>03:40</strong> Why exercise matters so much in Parkinson’s<br> <strong>08:15</strong> Neuroplasticity and how movement affects the brain<br> <strong>13:35</strong> Training the nervous system, not just the muscles<br> <strong>18:20</strong> Symptom variability and adapting day to day<br> <strong>23:10</strong> How athletes approach Parkinson’s differently<br> <strong>28:00</strong> Why meaningful movement works better than going through the motions<br> <strong>33:10</strong> Working with what is there, not what you wish was there<br> <strong>38:00</strong> Final thoughts on training, adaptation, and purpose</p><p>About the Guest:</p><p>Julie Hershberg is a neurological physical therapist and founder of <strong>re+active therapy &amp; wellness</strong>, where she helps people with Parkinson’s and other neurologic conditions rebuild trust in their bodies and nervous systems, while keeping movement creative, challenging, and fun.</p><p>She is passionate about interdisciplinary care, creative movement, and helping people return to the activities that make life meaningful.</p><p>Connect with Julie:</p><p>Website: <a href="https://www.reactivept.com">https://www.reactivept.com</a></p><p>LinkedIn: <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/julie-hershberg-pt-dpt-ncs-40481545/">https://www.linkedin.com/in/julie-hershberg-pt-dpt-ncs-40481545/</a></p><p>Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/reactivept/">https://www.instagram.com/reactivept/</a></p><p>Facebook: <a href="https://www.facebook.com/neurologicptlosangeles">https://www.facebook.com/neurologicptlosangeles</a></p><p>YouTube: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/@reactivept">https://www.youtube.com/@reactivept</a></p><p>TikTok: <a href="https://www.tiktok.com/@reactivetherapy">https://www.tiktok.com/@reactivetherapy</a></p><p>About the hosts:</p><p>Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich are athletes living with Parkinson’s who share what they’re learning in real time: what’s working, what’s frustrating, and how to keep moving forward with an athlete’s mindset.</p><p>Follow / connect:</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer:</p><p>This podcast contains personal experience and education only, not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical decisions.</p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Parkinson’s disease, Parkinson’s podcast, Parkinson’s symptoms, Living with Parkinson’s, Parkinson’s for athletes, Training with Parkinson’s, Exercise for Parkinson’s, Mobility and balance training, Parkinson’s fatigue, Tremor management, Recovery strategies, Longevity and performance, Biohacking for Parkinson’s</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
      <podcast:transcript url="https://share.transistor.fm/s/8b981c9b/transcript.txt" type="text/plain"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Apathy Is Not Laziness</title>
      <itunes:episode>8</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>8</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>Apathy Is Not Laziness</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">1c2a171e-5db1-4665-9e83-cecbf570c205</guid>
      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/4f602085</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>In this episode, Eric and Todd catch up on Eric’s latest health updates, including how he is managing AFib, recent cardiac testing, and the way those challenges are shaping his training. They talk through what it feels like when the numbers do not quite line up, including HRV, unexpected heart rate spikes, and body composition readings, and how they are learning to navigate uncertainty without spiraling.</p><p>The conversation then shifts to one of the hardest Parkinson’s symptoms to explain: apathy. Not laziness. Not weakness. More like a neurological freeze that can make even the things you love feel difficult to start. They explore how apathy shows up in daily life, how it impacts identity, and a few simple experiments they are trying to create momentum and keep moving forward.</p><p>Key Takeaways:</p><ul><li>Chronic health management can feel like a constant cycle: adapt, reassess, repeat.</li><li>Apathy is real and neurological. It is not a character flaw.</li><li>Some days are about progress. Other days are about maintenance.</li><li>Rating your day helps reduce emotion in decision-making.</li><li>You do not have to solve everything. You just have to keep showing up.</li></ul><p><br>Key Moments:</p><p>00:31 – Bloodwork, testosterone changes, and tracking baselines<br>01:09 – AFib, cardiac testing, CT scan results, and shifting to steady-state training<br>03:30 – HRV confusion: when “high” numbers may not mean what you think<br>06:09 – Body composition data, skepticism, and humor as coping<br>08:50 – Sleep disruption, travel fatigue, and symptom flare-ups<br>11:30 – Diet talk, protein timing, and fueling as endurance athletes (personal experience)<br>21:20 – Rating symptoms 1–10: defining “worst day” vs “best day”<br>22:48 – The reality of apathy: lack of motivation even for things you love<br>24:00 – Movement as a reset: shaking the body to break the freeze<br>28:20 – The Iboga story: processing dopamine loss and identity (personal experience)<br>33:40 – THC, sleep, tremor, and shifting perspective (personal experience)</p><p>Follow / Connect:</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer:</p><p>This podcast reflects personal experience and educational discussion only. It is not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making decisions related to medications, supplements, training, or treatment.</p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>In this episode, Eric and Todd catch up on Eric’s latest health updates, including how he is managing AFib, recent cardiac testing, and the way those challenges are shaping his training. They talk through what it feels like when the numbers do not quite line up, including HRV, unexpected heart rate spikes, and body composition readings, and how they are learning to navigate uncertainty without spiraling.</p><p>The conversation then shifts to one of the hardest Parkinson’s symptoms to explain: apathy. Not laziness. Not weakness. More like a neurological freeze that can make even the things you love feel difficult to start. They explore how apathy shows up in daily life, how it impacts identity, and a few simple experiments they are trying to create momentum and keep moving forward.</p><p>Key Takeaways:</p><ul><li>Chronic health management can feel like a constant cycle: adapt, reassess, repeat.</li><li>Apathy is real and neurological. It is not a character flaw.</li><li>Some days are about progress. Other days are about maintenance.</li><li>Rating your day helps reduce emotion in decision-making.</li><li>You do not have to solve everything. You just have to keep showing up.</li></ul><p><br>Key Moments:</p><p>00:31 – Bloodwork, testosterone changes, and tracking baselines<br>01:09 – AFib, cardiac testing, CT scan results, and shifting to steady-state training<br>03:30 – HRV confusion: when “high” numbers may not mean what you think<br>06:09 – Body composition data, skepticism, and humor as coping<br>08:50 – Sleep disruption, travel fatigue, and symptom flare-ups<br>11:30 – Diet talk, protein timing, and fueling as endurance athletes (personal experience)<br>21:20 – Rating symptoms 1–10: defining “worst day” vs “best day”<br>22:48 – The reality of apathy: lack of motivation even for things you love<br>24:00 – Movement as a reset: shaking the body to break the freeze<br>28:20 – The Iboga story: processing dopamine loss and identity (personal experience)<br>33:40 – THC, sleep, tremor, and shifting perspective (personal experience)</p><p>Follow / Connect:</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer:</p><p>This podcast reflects personal experience and educational discussion only. It is not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making decisions related to medications, supplements, training, or treatment.</p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Wed, 04 Mar 2026 08:00:00 -0800</pubDate>
      <author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/4f602085/39461bc9.mp3" length="37125174" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://img.transistorcdn.com/m8GdwCmuvHOOD8mYaecYcUaLLUuMflec9LjG-6h8v7E/rs:fill:0:0:1/w:1400/h:1400/q:60/mb:500000/aHR0cHM6Ly9pbWct/dXBsb2FkLXByb2R1/Y3Rpb24udHJhbnNp/c3Rvci5mbS80ZDQ3/ZTk4MDVmYjNjMDBh/MDcwOTRjZGUyYjg0/YWQyMC5wbmc.jpg"/>
      <itunes:duration>2318</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>In this episode, Eric and Todd catch up on Eric’s latest health updates, including how he is managing AFib, recent cardiac testing, and the way those challenges are shaping his training. They talk through what it feels like when the numbers do not quite line up, including HRV, unexpected heart rate spikes, and body composition readings, and how they are learning to navigate uncertainty without spiraling.</p><p>The conversation then shifts to one of the hardest Parkinson’s symptoms to explain: apathy. Not laziness. Not weakness. More like a neurological freeze that can make even the things you love feel difficult to start. They explore how apathy shows up in daily life, how it impacts identity, and a few simple experiments they are trying to create momentum and keep moving forward.</p><p>Key Takeaways:</p><ul><li>Chronic health management can feel like a constant cycle: adapt, reassess, repeat.</li><li>Apathy is real and neurological. It is not a character flaw.</li><li>Some days are about progress. Other days are about maintenance.</li><li>Rating your day helps reduce emotion in decision-making.</li><li>You do not have to solve everything. You just have to keep showing up.</li></ul><p><br>Key Moments:</p><p>00:31 – Bloodwork, testosterone changes, and tracking baselines<br>01:09 – AFib, cardiac testing, CT scan results, and shifting to steady-state training<br>03:30 – HRV confusion: when “high” numbers may not mean what you think<br>06:09 – Body composition data, skepticism, and humor as coping<br>08:50 – Sleep disruption, travel fatigue, and symptom flare-ups<br>11:30 – Diet talk, protein timing, and fueling as endurance athletes (personal experience)<br>21:20 – Rating symptoms 1–10: defining “worst day” vs “best day”<br>22:48 – The reality of apathy: lack of motivation even for things you love<br>24:00 – Movement as a reset: shaking the body to break the freeze<br>28:20 – The Iboga story: processing dopamine loss and identity (personal experience)<br>33:40 – THC, sleep, tremor, and shifting perspective (personal experience)</p><p>Follow / Connect:</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer:</p><p>This podcast reflects personal experience and educational discussion only. It is not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making decisions related to medications, supplements, training, or treatment.</p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Parkinson’s disease, Parkinson’s podcast, Parkinson’s symptoms, Living with Parkinson’s, Parkinson’s for athletes, Training with Parkinson’s, Exercise for Parkinson’s, Mobility and balance training, Parkinson’s fatigue, Tremor management, Recovery strategies, Longevity and performance, Biohacking for Parkinson’s</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
      <podcast:transcript url="https://share.transistor.fm/s/4f602085/transcript.txt" type="text/plain"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>How Are You...Really? Parkinson’s, Honesty, and the Athlete Mindset</title>
      <itunes:episode>7</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>7</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>How Are You...Really? Parkinson’s, Honesty, and the Athlete Mindset</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">207e1dca-9572-41e1-9290-cec58db82a14</guid>
      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/181b5cb3</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>“How are you doing?”</p><p>For most people, it’s small talk. With Parkinson’s, it can feel like an exercise in figuring out what people really want to hear, and how much truth is too much.</p><p>Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich talk through the lived experience of that moment, when you want to answer honestly, but the honest answer can come out sounding like a list of what isn’t working. They unpack how the answer changes depending on who you’re talking to: acquaintances get the quick “I’m doing alright,” while family and people you love can be harder, because you don’t want to overburden them either.</p><p>From there, the conversation shifts to what anchors them: training. They discuss Concept2 rankings, chasing benchmarks, and Todd's latest results while training in an altitude room.</p><p>They also talk wrist dexterity limitations, compensation patterns that can quietly lead to tendonitis, and why athlete-level body awareness can be an unexpected advantage when navigating a progressive condition.</p><p>This one is all about navigating honesty and continuing to show up, even when the answer isn’t simple.</p><p><br>Key Takeaways:</p><ul><li>“How are you?” isn’t small talk when you live with Parkinson’s. Navigating honesty is part of the training.</li><li>Athlete awareness helps distinguish Parkinson’s symptoms from normal soreness, fatigue, and aging.</li><li>Compensation patterns (like wrist limitations leading to arm overuse) can create secondary issues.</li><li>You don’t stop chasing performance. You just adjust the math.</li></ul><p><br>Key Moments:</p><p>00:40 – Weekly check-in: symptoms vs. soreness<br>03:15 – The “How are you?” dilemma: how honest is too honest?<br>08:20 – Athlete body awareness as an advantage<br>14:05 – Concept2 logbook + global ranking (16th/17th worldwide)<br>18:40 – Altitude-room training and performance metrics<br>24:10 – Wrist dexterity, compensation, and tendonitis<br>31:55 – The balance between realism and resilience<br>39:20 – Closing mindset: keep training, adjust expectations</p><p>Follow / Connect:</p><p><br>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer:</p><p><br>Personal experience and education only, not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical decisions.</p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>“How are you doing?”</p><p>For most people, it’s small talk. With Parkinson’s, it can feel like an exercise in figuring out what people really want to hear, and how much truth is too much.</p><p>Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich talk through the lived experience of that moment, when you want to answer honestly, but the honest answer can come out sounding like a list of what isn’t working. They unpack how the answer changes depending on who you’re talking to: acquaintances get the quick “I’m doing alright,” while family and people you love can be harder, because you don’t want to overburden them either.</p><p>From there, the conversation shifts to what anchors them: training. They discuss Concept2 rankings, chasing benchmarks, and Todd's latest results while training in an altitude room.</p><p>They also talk wrist dexterity limitations, compensation patterns that can quietly lead to tendonitis, and why athlete-level body awareness can be an unexpected advantage when navigating a progressive condition.</p><p>This one is all about navigating honesty and continuing to show up, even when the answer isn’t simple.</p><p><br>Key Takeaways:</p><ul><li>“How are you?” isn’t small talk when you live with Parkinson’s. Navigating honesty is part of the training.</li><li>Athlete awareness helps distinguish Parkinson’s symptoms from normal soreness, fatigue, and aging.</li><li>Compensation patterns (like wrist limitations leading to arm overuse) can create secondary issues.</li><li>You don’t stop chasing performance. You just adjust the math.</li></ul><p><br>Key Moments:</p><p>00:40 – Weekly check-in: symptoms vs. soreness<br>03:15 – The “How are you?” dilemma: how honest is too honest?<br>08:20 – Athlete body awareness as an advantage<br>14:05 – Concept2 logbook + global ranking (16th/17th worldwide)<br>18:40 – Altitude-room training and performance metrics<br>24:10 – Wrist dexterity, compensation, and tendonitis<br>31:55 – The balance between realism and resilience<br>39:20 – Closing mindset: keep training, adjust expectations</p><p>Follow / Connect:</p><p><br>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer:</p><p><br>Personal experience and education only, not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical decisions.</p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Wed, 25 Feb 2026 08:00:00 -0800</pubDate>
      <author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/181b5cb3/3114023c.mp3" length="20749726" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://img.transistorcdn.com/4izTBF10S5CaraihUtYnfhzOPNAKtjoqDOIAx5jac0E/rs:fill:0:0:1/w:1400/h:1400/q:60/mb:500000/aHR0cHM6Ly9pbWct/dXBsb2FkLXByb2R1/Y3Rpb24udHJhbnNp/c3Rvci5mbS9mMDMy/ZmM2NzBiMGRmZjMz/MGFhMWI4MzY0OTIw/YmExZC5wbmc.jpg"/>
      <itunes:duration>1295</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>“How are you doing?”</p><p>For most people, it’s small talk. With Parkinson’s, it can feel like an exercise in figuring out what people really want to hear, and how much truth is too much.</p><p>Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich talk through the lived experience of that moment, when you want to answer honestly, but the honest answer can come out sounding like a list of what isn’t working. They unpack how the answer changes depending on who you’re talking to: acquaintances get the quick “I’m doing alright,” while family and people you love can be harder, because you don’t want to overburden them either.</p><p>From there, the conversation shifts to what anchors them: training. They discuss Concept2 rankings, chasing benchmarks, and Todd's latest results while training in an altitude room.</p><p>They also talk wrist dexterity limitations, compensation patterns that can quietly lead to tendonitis, and why athlete-level body awareness can be an unexpected advantage when navigating a progressive condition.</p><p>This one is all about navigating honesty and continuing to show up, even when the answer isn’t simple.</p><p><br>Key Takeaways:</p><ul><li>“How are you?” isn’t small talk when you live with Parkinson’s. Navigating honesty is part of the training.</li><li>Athlete awareness helps distinguish Parkinson’s symptoms from normal soreness, fatigue, and aging.</li><li>Compensation patterns (like wrist limitations leading to arm overuse) can create secondary issues.</li><li>You don’t stop chasing performance. You just adjust the math.</li></ul><p><br>Key Moments:</p><p>00:40 – Weekly check-in: symptoms vs. soreness<br>03:15 – The “How are you?” dilemma: how honest is too honest?<br>08:20 – Athlete body awareness as an advantage<br>14:05 – Concept2 logbook + global ranking (16th/17th worldwide)<br>18:40 – Altitude-room training and performance metrics<br>24:10 – Wrist dexterity, compensation, and tendonitis<br>31:55 – The balance between realism and resilience<br>39:20 – Closing mindset: keep training, adjust expectations</p><p>Follow / Connect:</p><p><br>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer:</p><p><br>Personal experience and education only, not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical decisions.</p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Parkinson’s disease, Parkinson’s podcast, Parkinson’s symptoms, Living with Parkinson’s, Parkinson’s for athletes, Training with Parkinson’s, Exercise for Parkinson’s, Mobility and balance training, Parkinson’s fatigue, Tremor management, Recovery strategies, Longevity and performance, Biohacking for Parkinson’s</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
      <podcast:transcript url="https://share.transistor.fm/s/181b5cb3/transcript.txt" type="text/plain"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Mindset Under Pressure: Parkinson’s, Performance &amp; Purpose</title>
      <itunes:episode>6</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>6</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>Mindset Under Pressure: Parkinson’s, Performance &amp; Purpose</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">4fb0fe6c-e30e-4518-bc24-8adf822a22a6</guid>
      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/f4a78986</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>Parkinson’s doesn’t just challenge your body. It challenges your identity.</p><p>In this episode, Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich talk candidly about what happens when Parkinson’s forces a shift in career, competition, and self-perception: what do you do when the thing that defined you starts changing?</p><p>They explore nostalgia, gratitude, job hunting, and the difference between outcome goals and process goals. They discuss the mental highs and lows of not giving up, and redefining what competing looks like now.</p><p><br></p><p>Key Takeaways:</p><ul><li><strong>The present moment matters most.</strong> Anxiety lives in the future; regret lives in the past. Training happens now.</li><li><strong>Process &gt; outcome.</strong> Focusing on daily actions compounds more than chasing times, rankings, or validation.</li><li><strong>Athletic identity evolves.</strong> At some point, every athlete faces decline: Parkinson’s just accelerates the timeline.</li><li><strong>Grace is part of the work.</strong> Transitions require patience with yourself.</li><li><strong>Say yes.</strong> Community and new experiences (like inclusive sailing) can shift perspective fast.</li></ul><p>Key Moments:</p><p>00:32 – Atmospheric river story + environmental exposure questions<br>03:30 – Genetics vs. environment: the “what caused it?” conversation<br>05:17 – Inclusive sailing + saying yes to opportunity<br>07:28 – Mindset shift: openness, gratitude, and community<br>11:20 – Nostalgia vs. fear of the future<br>13:37 – “Any day on the water is a good day”<br>15:48 – Ego, aging, and athletic decline<br>18:18 – Process goals vs outcome goals<br>22:28 – AFib update + training limitations<br>23:10 – Career limbo + Parkinson’s and employment<br>29:46 – Forced retirement vs choosing to walk away</p><p>Follow / Connect:</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer:</p><p>Personal experience and education only, not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical decisions.</p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>Parkinson’s doesn’t just challenge your body. It challenges your identity.</p><p>In this episode, Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich talk candidly about what happens when Parkinson’s forces a shift in career, competition, and self-perception: what do you do when the thing that defined you starts changing?</p><p>They explore nostalgia, gratitude, job hunting, and the difference between outcome goals and process goals. They discuss the mental highs and lows of not giving up, and redefining what competing looks like now.</p><p><br></p><p>Key Takeaways:</p><ul><li><strong>The present moment matters most.</strong> Anxiety lives in the future; regret lives in the past. Training happens now.</li><li><strong>Process &gt; outcome.</strong> Focusing on daily actions compounds more than chasing times, rankings, or validation.</li><li><strong>Athletic identity evolves.</strong> At some point, every athlete faces decline: Parkinson’s just accelerates the timeline.</li><li><strong>Grace is part of the work.</strong> Transitions require patience with yourself.</li><li><strong>Say yes.</strong> Community and new experiences (like inclusive sailing) can shift perspective fast.</li></ul><p>Key Moments:</p><p>00:32 – Atmospheric river story + environmental exposure questions<br>03:30 – Genetics vs. environment: the “what caused it?” conversation<br>05:17 – Inclusive sailing + saying yes to opportunity<br>07:28 – Mindset shift: openness, gratitude, and community<br>11:20 – Nostalgia vs. fear of the future<br>13:37 – “Any day on the water is a good day”<br>15:48 – Ego, aging, and athletic decline<br>18:18 – Process goals vs outcome goals<br>22:28 – AFib update + training limitations<br>23:10 – Career limbo + Parkinson’s and employment<br>29:46 – Forced retirement vs choosing to walk away</p><p>Follow / Connect:</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer:</p><p>Personal experience and education only, not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical decisions.</p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Wed, 18 Feb 2026 08:00:00 -0800</pubDate>
      <author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/f4a78986/412f03fa.mp3" length="31809332" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://img.transistorcdn.com/UBRPgpFO8rR71qJr2uPPO1ZshSi7aEx1AQLm9i488vs/rs:fill:0:0:1/w:1400/h:1400/q:60/mb:500000/aHR0cHM6Ly9pbWct/dXBsb2FkLXByb2R1/Y3Rpb24udHJhbnNp/c3Rvci5mbS9mYTky/ZTI5MjUwNWE1MjA3/M2IwNGY0YjJhMDYy/YmRhNS5wbmc.jpg"/>
      <itunes:duration>1986</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>Parkinson’s doesn’t just challenge your body. It challenges your identity.</p><p>In this episode, Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich talk candidly about what happens when Parkinson’s forces a shift in career, competition, and self-perception: what do you do when the thing that defined you starts changing?</p><p>They explore nostalgia, gratitude, job hunting, and the difference between outcome goals and process goals. They discuss the mental highs and lows of not giving up, and redefining what competing looks like now.</p><p><br></p><p>Key Takeaways:</p><ul><li><strong>The present moment matters most.</strong> Anxiety lives in the future; regret lives in the past. Training happens now.</li><li><strong>Process &gt; outcome.</strong> Focusing on daily actions compounds more than chasing times, rankings, or validation.</li><li><strong>Athletic identity evolves.</strong> At some point, every athlete faces decline: Parkinson’s just accelerates the timeline.</li><li><strong>Grace is part of the work.</strong> Transitions require patience with yourself.</li><li><strong>Say yes.</strong> Community and new experiences (like inclusive sailing) can shift perspective fast.</li></ul><p>Key Moments:</p><p>00:32 – Atmospheric river story + environmental exposure questions<br>03:30 – Genetics vs. environment: the “what caused it?” conversation<br>05:17 – Inclusive sailing + saying yes to opportunity<br>07:28 – Mindset shift: openness, gratitude, and community<br>11:20 – Nostalgia vs. fear of the future<br>13:37 – “Any day on the water is a good day”<br>15:48 – Ego, aging, and athletic decline<br>18:18 – Process goals vs outcome goals<br>22:28 – AFib update + training limitations<br>23:10 – Career limbo + Parkinson’s and employment<br>29:46 – Forced retirement vs choosing to walk away</p><p>Follow / Connect:</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer:</p><p>Personal experience and education only, not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical decisions.</p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Parkinson’s disease, Parkinson’s podcast, Parkinson’s symptoms, Living with Parkinson’s, Parkinson’s for athletes, Training with Parkinson’s, Exercise for Parkinson’s, Mobility and balance training, Parkinson’s fatigue, Tremor management, Recovery strategies, Longevity and performance, Biohacking for Parkinson’s</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
      <podcast:transcript url="https://share.transistor.fm/s/f4a78986/transcript.txt" type="text/plain"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Treat the Athlete, Not the Diagnosis | Ellen Minzner</title>
      <itunes:episode>5</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>5</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>Treat the Athlete, Not the Diagnosis | Ellen Minzner</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">619bb686-177c-47c3-9727-21ef7ced283e</guid>
      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/9185de76</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>Adaptive sport asks a simple question: what does the sport require, and how do you build the athlete to meet it. Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich sit down with <strong>Ellen Minzner</strong>, elite rowing coach and leader in adaptive and Paralympic sport, to discuss coaching athletes with disabilities through standards, structure, and respect. From Parkinson’s to para rowing to the Paralympic Games, the conversation centers on competition, training, and an athlete-first approach.</p><p>Ellen shares why being treated like an athlete matters, how competition supports development, and why Parkinson’s presents unique challenges in training because it is progressive and unstable. Coaching decisions, sport demands, and measurable progress remain central throughout.</p><p>What You’ll Learn:</p><ul><li>Why adaptive athletes don’t want to be “coddled.” They want standards, structure, and the chance to improve.</li><li>How competition functions as a training tool, not just a finish line.</li><li>What makes Parkinson’s different from other disabilities in sport and why coaching has to adapt.</li><li>How elite coaches separate sport demands from limitations.</li><li>Why the Paralympics normalize disability in a way everyday life often doesn’t.</li></ul><p><br>Key Takeaways:</p><p>➡️ Treat the person like an athlete, not a diagnosis. Expectations matter, and so does respect.<br>➡️ Competition drives integration. Skills, nerves, fitness, and mindset have to show up together.<br>➡️ Adaptive sport requires precision. Progressive conditions like Parkinson’s require constant adjustment.<br>➡️ Improvement fuels motivation. Athletes need evidence they are getting better, not just “participating.”</p><p>Key Moments:</p><p>00:00 – Introduction to Ellen Minzner and her background in rowing and adaptive sport<br>03:10 – Why the Paralympic Games are so powerful and surprisingly accessible as a fan experience<br>06:45 – “The world is built for them.” Disability normalized at the Paralympics<br>10:20 – What adaptive athletes actually want from coaches<br>14:05 – Competition as a tool for growth, not just medals<br>18:40 – The spectrum of disability in adaptive sport including congenital, acquired, and progressive<br>23:15 – Parkinson’s as a non-stable condition and what that means for training<br>27:30 – Defining sport demands versus limitations. What must be trained, adapted, or accepted<br>31:10 – “They just want to be treated like an athlete”<br>34:50 – Why hard work and visible improvement matter more than inspiration<br>38:20 – The danger of lowering standards in adaptive sport<br>42:00 – Closing thoughts on respect, effort, and doing meaningful work</p><p>About the guest:</p><p>Ellen Minzner is the Para High Performance Director at USRowing, where she leads the U.S. Para national team program. She was named the U.S. Olympic &amp; Paralympic Committee’s 2023 Paralympic Coach of the Year, and under her leadership, Team USA earned two silver medals at the 2023 World Rowing Championships and qualified boats for the 2024 Paralympic Games in Paris.</p><p>A former elite athlete, Ellen is a two-time World Champion in the lightweight women’s pair (1995, 1996) and a Pan American Games gold medalist. She has also held leadership roles focused on inclusion and access in rowing, including work at Community Rowing, Inc.</p><p>Connect with Ellen:</p><p>Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ellenminzner/?hl=en<br>LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ellenminzner/</p><p>About the hosts:</p><p>Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich are athletes living with Parkinson’s who share what they’re learning in real time: what’s working, what’s frustrating, and how to keep moving forward with an athlete’s mindset.</p><p>Follow / connect:</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>This podcast contains personal experience and education only, not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical decisions.</p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>Adaptive sport asks a simple question: what does the sport require, and how do you build the athlete to meet it. Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich sit down with <strong>Ellen Minzner</strong>, elite rowing coach and leader in adaptive and Paralympic sport, to discuss coaching athletes with disabilities through standards, structure, and respect. From Parkinson’s to para rowing to the Paralympic Games, the conversation centers on competition, training, and an athlete-first approach.</p><p>Ellen shares why being treated like an athlete matters, how competition supports development, and why Parkinson’s presents unique challenges in training because it is progressive and unstable. Coaching decisions, sport demands, and measurable progress remain central throughout.</p><p>What You’ll Learn:</p><ul><li>Why adaptive athletes don’t want to be “coddled.” They want standards, structure, and the chance to improve.</li><li>How competition functions as a training tool, not just a finish line.</li><li>What makes Parkinson’s different from other disabilities in sport and why coaching has to adapt.</li><li>How elite coaches separate sport demands from limitations.</li><li>Why the Paralympics normalize disability in a way everyday life often doesn’t.</li></ul><p><br>Key Takeaways:</p><p>➡️ Treat the person like an athlete, not a diagnosis. Expectations matter, and so does respect.<br>➡️ Competition drives integration. Skills, nerves, fitness, and mindset have to show up together.<br>➡️ Adaptive sport requires precision. Progressive conditions like Parkinson’s require constant adjustment.<br>➡️ Improvement fuels motivation. Athletes need evidence they are getting better, not just “participating.”</p><p>Key Moments:</p><p>00:00 – Introduction to Ellen Minzner and her background in rowing and adaptive sport<br>03:10 – Why the Paralympic Games are so powerful and surprisingly accessible as a fan experience<br>06:45 – “The world is built for them.” Disability normalized at the Paralympics<br>10:20 – What adaptive athletes actually want from coaches<br>14:05 – Competition as a tool for growth, not just medals<br>18:40 – The spectrum of disability in adaptive sport including congenital, acquired, and progressive<br>23:15 – Parkinson’s as a non-stable condition and what that means for training<br>27:30 – Defining sport demands versus limitations. What must be trained, adapted, or accepted<br>31:10 – “They just want to be treated like an athlete”<br>34:50 – Why hard work and visible improvement matter more than inspiration<br>38:20 – The danger of lowering standards in adaptive sport<br>42:00 – Closing thoughts on respect, effort, and doing meaningful work</p><p>About the guest:</p><p>Ellen Minzner is the Para High Performance Director at USRowing, where she leads the U.S. Para national team program. She was named the U.S. Olympic &amp; Paralympic Committee’s 2023 Paralympic Coach of the Year, and under her leadership, Team USA earned two silver medals at the 2023 World Rowing Championships and qualified boats for the 2024 Paralympic Games in Paris.</p><p>A former elite athlete, Ellen is a two-time World Champion in the lightweight women’s pair (1995, 1996) and a Pan American Games gold medalist. She has also held leadership roles focused on inclusion and access in rowing, including work at Community Rowing, Inc.</p><p>Connect with Ellen:</p><p>Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ellenminzner/?hl=en<br>LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ellenminzner/</p><p>About the hosts:</p><p>Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich are athletes living with Parkinson’s who share what they’re learning in real time: what’s working, what’s frustrating, and how to keep moving forward with an athlete’s mindset.</p><p>Follow / connect:</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>This podcast contains personal experience and education only, not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical decisions.</p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Wed, 11 Feb 2026 08:00:00 -0800</pubDate>
      <author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/9185de76/7f815edc.mp3" length="31862882" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://img.transistorcdn.com/HEFJAWgoN0ses3VO_fOFVtsiGsqTczOMKAEzZSMBgIs/rs:fill:0:0:1/w:1400/h:1400/q:60/mb:500000/aHR0cHM6Ly9pbWct/dXBsb2FkLXByb2R1/Y3Rpb24udHJhbnNp/c3Rvci5mbS9kOTI2/NTRkYjYxYWNjMjM0/ZWYwYTQxZWNlYmM3/ZTlmZS5wbmc.jpg"/>
      <itunes:duration>3976</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>Adaptive sport asks a simple question: what does the sport require, and how do you build the athlete to meet it. Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich sit down with <strong>Ellen Minzner</strong>, elite rowing coach and leader in adaptive and Paralympic sport, to discuss coaching athletes with disabilities through standards, structure, and respect. From Parkinson’s to para rowing to the Paralympic Games, the conversation centers on competition, training, and an athlete-first approach.</p><p>Ellen shares why being treated like an athlete matters, how competition supports development, and why Parkinson’s presents unique challenges in training because it is progressive and unstable. Coaching decisions, sport demands, and measurable progress remain central throughout.</p><p>What You’ll Learn:</p><ul><li>Why adaptive athletes don’t want to be “coddled.” They want standards, structure, and the chance to improve.</li><li>How competition functions as a training tool, not just a finish line.</li><li>What makes Parkinson’s different from other disabilities in sport and why coaching has to adapt.</li><li>How elite coaches separate sport demands from limitations.</li><li>Why the Paralympics normalize disability in a way everyday life often doesn’t.</li></ul><p><br>Key Takeaways:</p><p>➡️ Treat the person like an athlete, not a diagnosis. Expectations matter, and so does respect.<br>➡️ Competition drives integration. Skills, nerves, fitness, and mindset have to show up together.<br>➡️ Adaptive sport requires precision. Progressive conditions like Parkinson’s require constant adjustment.<br>➡️ Improvement fuels motivation. Athletes need evidence they are getting better, not just “participating.”</p><p>Key Moments:</p><p>00:00 – Introduction to Ellen Minzner and her background in rowing and adaptive sport<br>03:10 – Why the Paralympic Games are so powerful and surprisingly accessible as a fan experience<br>06:45 – “The world is built for them.” Disability normalized at the Paralympics<br>10:20 – What adaptive athletes actually want from coaches<br>14:05 – Competition as a tool for growth, not just medals<br>18:40 – The spectrum of disability in adaptive sport including congenital, acquired, and progressive<br>23:15 – Parkinson’s as a non-stable condition and what that means for training<br>27:30 – Defining sport demands versus limitations. What must be trained, adapted, or accepted<br>31:10 – “They just want to be treated like an athlete”<br>34:50 – Why hard work and visible improvement matter more than inspiration<br>38:20 – The danger of lowering standards in adaptive sport<br>42:00 – Closing thoughts on respect, effort, and doing meaningful work</p><p>About the guest:</p><p>Ellen Minzner is the Para High Performance Director at USRowing, where she leads the U.S. Para national team program. She was named the U.S. Olympic &amp; Paralympic Committee’s 2023 Paralympic Coach of the Year, and under her leadership, Team USA earned two silver medals at the 2023 World Rowing Championships and qualified boats for the 2024 Paralympic Games in Paris.</p><p>A former elite athlete, Ellen is a two-time World Champion in the lightweight women’s pair (1995, 1996) and a Pan American Games gold medalist. She has also held leadership roles focused on inclusion and access in rowing, including work at Community Rowing, Inc.</p><p>Connect with Ellen:</p><p>Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ellenminzner/?hl=en<br>LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ellenminzner/</p><p>About the hosts:</p><p>Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich are athletes living with Parkinson’s who share what they’re learning in real time: what’s working, what’s frustrating, and how to keep moving forward with an athlete’s mindset.</p><p>Follow / connect:</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>This podcast contains personal experience and education only, not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical decisions.</p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Parkinson’s disease, Parkinson’s podcast, Parkinson’s symptoms, Living with Parkinson’s, Parkinson’s for athletes, Training with Parkinson’s, Exercise for Parkinson’s, Mobility and balance training, Parkinson’s fatigue, Tremor management, Recovery strategies, Longevity and performance, Biohacking for Parkinson’s</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
      <podcast:transcript url="https://share.transistor.fm/s/9185de76/transcript.txt" type="text/plain"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Gamify Your Day</title>
      <itunes:episode>4</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>4</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>Gamify Your Day</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
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      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/281d7a93</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>Parkinson’s doesn’t only show up during workouts; it shows up when you’re putting on a shirt, tying shoes, walking the dog, or getting up off the floor. In this episode, Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich share how they “gamify” everyday tasks to turn normal life into training: adding constraints, timing tasks, using the non-dominant hand, and stacking small challenges that build mobility, coordination, confidence, and consistency.</p><p>What You’ll Learn:</p><ul><li>How to turn daily tasks into “tests” you can repeat and improve (without needing more gym time).</li><li>Why adding load / biofeedback, balance constraints, and the non-dominant side can make movement practice more effective and engaging.</li><li>Simple “scoreboard” examples: the t-shirt challenge, timing your dog walk, shoe-tying reps, and “get ups.”</li><li>A mindset shift: choose your challenge on purpose, instead of feeling like Parkinson’s is choosing it for you.</li></ul><p><br>Key Takeaways:</p><ul><li>Treat chores like training. “Gamification” makes daily work more engaging and helps skills that are already eroding show up stronger in real life.</li><li>Repeat the test. Do a task multiple times to refine technique and efficiency (instead of just “getting through it”).</li><li>Add constraints (load, balance, eyes closed, non-dominant hand) to create neurological + physical demand without fancy equipment.</li><li>The floor is training. Practicing getting up and down builds confidence and reduces fear around falls and floor transitions.</li><li>Do the work; don’t chase the outcome. The consistency compounds.</li></ul><p><br>Key Moments:</p><p>00:32 – Weekly training check-in + medicine ball warmup ideas<br>02:27 – Theme setup: movement practice “wherever you find it” + PT discussion (includes a mention of Jimmy Choi at the clinic)<br>03:15 – Physical therapy tactics: add load, time tasks, and build “tests” (t-shirt/vest drill)<br>05:28 – Why daily-life training matters: you notice PD more in day-to-day tasks than the gym<br>06:00 – Stretching, mobility, juggling as cognitive/neurological work<br>08:35 – Biofeedback + load (ankle/hand weights, trekking pole idea)<br>09:47 – “Get ups” (Dan John) and why floor practice matters<br>12:09 – Dog-walk gamification: 18 minutes → 15 minutes (move with purpose)<br>36:22 – Shoe-tying reps + non-dominant hand + cognitive challenges<br>38:49 – Shirt-on/off becomes training; add balance/load/eyes closed; “limited by imagination”<br>43:18 – Why this is underappreciated + closing mindset (“do the work…”)</p><p>Follow / Connect:</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer:</p><p>Personal experience and education only, not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical decisions.</p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>Parkinson’s doesn’t only show up during workouts; it shows up when you’re putting on a shirt, tying shoes, walking the dog, or getting up off the floor. In this episode, Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich share how they “gamify” everyday tasks to turn normal life into training: adding constraints, timing tasks, using the non-dominant hand, and stacking small challenges that build mobility, coordination, confidence, and consistency.</p><p>What You’ll Learn:</p><ul><li>How to turn daily tasks into “tests” you can repeat and improve (without needing more gym time).</li><li>Why adding load / biofeedback, balance constraints, and the non-dominant side can make movement practice more effective and engaging.</li><li>Simple “scoreboard” examples: the t-shirt challenge, timing your dog walk, shoe-tying reps, and “get ups.”</li><li>A mindset shift: choose your challenge on purpose, instead of feeling like Parkinson’s is choosing it for you.</li></ul><p><br>Key Takeaways:</p><ul><li>Treat chores like training. “Gamification” makes daily work more engaging and helps skills that are already eroding show up stronger in real life.</li><li>Repeat the test. Do a task multiple times to refine technique and efficiency (instead of just “getting through it”).</li><li>Add constraints (load, balance, eyes closed, non-dominant hand) to create neurological + physical demand without fancy equipment.</li><li>The floor is training. Practicing getting up and down builds confidence and reduces fear around falls and floor transitions.</li><li>Do the work; don’t chase the outcome. The consistency compounds.</li></ul><p><br>Key Moments:</p><p>00:32 – Weekly training check-in + medicine ball warmup ideas<br>02:27 – Theme setup: movement practice “wherever you find it” + PT discussion (includes a mention of Jimmy Choi at the clinic)<br>03:15 – Physical therapy tactics: add load, time tasks, and build “tests” (t-shirt/vest drill)<br>05:28 – Why daily-life training matters: you notice PD more in day-to-day tasks than the gym<br>06:00 – Stretching, mobility, juggling as cognitive/neurological work<br>08:35 – Biofeedback + load (ankle/hand weights, trekking pole idea)<br>09:47 – “Get ups” (Dan John) and why floor practice matters<br>12:09 – Dog-walk gamification: 18 minutes → 15 minutes (move with purpose)<br>36:22 – Shoe-tying reps + non-dominant hand + cognitive challenges<br>38:49 – Shirt-on/off becomes training; add balance/load/eyes closed; “limited by imagination”<br>43:18 – Why this is underappreciated + closing mindset (“do the work…”)</p><p>Follow / Connect:</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer:</p><p>Personal experience and education only, not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical decisions.</p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Wed, 04 Feb 2026 05:45:00 -0800</pubDate>
      <author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/281d7a93/38a3aa3d.mp3" length="43185495" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://img.transistorcdn.com/0KxHHqXcRooL0WiLrpa2Le_logai312bMZ8qYm7Ofhg/rs:fill:0:0:1/w:1400/h:1400/q:60/mb:500000/aHR0cHM6Ly9pbWct/dXBsb2FkLXByb2R1/Y3Rpb24udHJhbnNp/c3Rvci5mbS8xZDc3/MDY3ODQ1MGMxY2Zj/MzhkZDJiM2EzMWNj/NmM4ZC5wbmc.jpg"/>
      <itunes:duration>2697</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>Parkinson’s doesn’t only show up during workouts; it shows up when you’re putting on a shirt, tying shoes, walking the dog, or getting up off the floor. In this episode, Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich share how they “gamify” everyday tasks to turn normal life into training: adding constraints, timing tasks, using the non-dominant hand, and stacking small challenges that build mobility, coordination, confidence, and consistency.</p><p>What You’ll Learn:</p><ul><li>How to turn daily tasks into “tests” you can repeat and improve (without needing more gym time).</li><li>Why adding load / biofeedback, balance constraints, and the non-dominant side can make movement practice more effective and engaging.</li><li>Simple “scoreboard” examples: the t-shirt challenge, timing your dog walk, shoe-tying reps, and “get ups.”</li><li>A mindset shift: choose your challenge on purpose, instead of feeling like Parkinson’s is choosing it for you.</li></ul><p><br>Key Takeaways:</p><ul><li>Treat chores like training. “Gamification” makes daily work more engaging and helps skills that are already eroding show up stronger in real life.</li><li>Repeat the test. Do a task multiple times to refine technique and efficiency (instead of just “getting through it”).</li><li>Add constraints (load, balance, eyes closed, non-dominant hand) to create neurological + physical demand without fancy equipment.</li><li>The floor is training. Practicing getting up and down builds confidence and reduces fear around falls and floor transitions.</li><li>Do the work; don’t chase the outcome. The consistency compounds.</li></ul><p><br>Key Moments:</p><p>00:32 – Weekly training check-in + medicine ball warmup ideas<br>02:27 – Theme setup: movement practice “wherever you find it” + PT discussion (includes a mention of Jimmy Choi at the clinic)<br>03:15 – Physical therapy tactics: add load, time tasks, and build “tests” (t-shirt/vest drill)<br>05:28 – Why daily-life training matters: you notice PD more in day-to-day tasks than the gym<br>06:00 – Stretching, mobility, juggling as cognitive/neurological work<br>08:35 – Biofeedback + load (ankle/hand weights, trekking pole idea)<br>09:47 – “Get ups” (Dan John) and why floor practice matters<br>12:09 – Dog-walk gamification: 18 minutes → 15 minutes (move with purpose)<br>36:22 – Shoe-tying reps + non-dominant hand + cognitive challenges<br>38:49 – Shirt-on/off becomes training; add balance/load/eyes closed; “limited by imagination”<br>43:18 – Why this is underappreciated + closing mindset (“do the work…”)</p><p>Follow / Connect:</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br>Disclaimer:</p><p>Personal experience and education only, not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical decisions.</p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Parkinson’s disease, Parkinson’s podcast, Parkinson’s symptoms, Living with Parkinson’s, Parkinson’s for athletes, Training with Parkinson’s, Exercise for Parkinson’s, Mobility and balance training, Parkinson’s fatigue, Tremor management, Recovery strategies, Longevity and performance, Biohacking for Parkinson’s</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>Yes</itunes:explicit>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Good Day. Bad Day. Train Anyway.</title>
      <itunes:episode>2</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>2</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>Good Day. Bad Day. Train Anyway.</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">bce4054a-d1db-4d1a-98f5-bbebf9aee11a</guid>
      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/e689f067</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>Some days you wake up and feel sharp. Other days, you can barely get through the warm-up. In this episode of Parkinson’s: An Athlete’s Journey, we talk about the real day-to-day variability of Parkinson’s, and how we keep training anyway.</p><p>We get into what helps most (and what’s just “interesting”): the basics like training and sleep quality, plus recovery tools like foam rolling, massage guns, sauna, cold exposure, and the tradeoffs of time and energy. We also talk about things we’ve personally tried or considered, and why the best plan is usually the one you’ll actually do consistently.</p><p>What we cover</p><ul><li>“Good day / bad day” check-in and why the gym can change the whole day </li><li>Training environments: Parkinson’s community <em>and</em> being around serious athletes </li><li>“Cardio fiesta” Zone 2: making long sessions mentally tolerable </li><li>Sleep: broken nights, REM sleep behavior, and why sleep has the biggest payoff </li><li>Personal experience with sleep supports (CBD/THC, magnesium, mouth taping, nasal strips) </li><li>Recovery tools: foam roller, massage gun, hyperbaric naps </li><li>Sauna vs cold plunge vs cold shower (benefit vs effort)</li></ul><p><br>Connect</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br></p><p>Medical disclaimer</p><p>This episode reflects personal experience only and is not medical advice. Always consult qualified healthcare professionals for decisions about medications, supplements, and treatment.</p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>Some days you wake up and feel sharp. Other days, you can barely get through the warm-up. In this episode of Parkinson’s: An Athlete’s Journey, we talk about the real day-to-day variability of Parkinson’s, and how we keep training anyway.</p><p>We get into what helps most (and what’s just “interesting”): the basics like training and sleep quality, plus recovery tools like foam rolling, massage guns, sauna, cold exposure, and the tradeoffs of time and energy. We also talk about things we’ve personally tried or considered, and why the best plan is usually the one you’ll actually do consistently.</p><p>What we cover</p><ul><li>“Good day / bad day” check-in and why the gym can change the whole day </li><li>Training environments: Parkinson’s community <em>and</em> being around serious athletes </li><li>“Cardio fiesta” Zone 2: making long sessions mentally tolerable </li><li>Sleep: broken nights, REM sleep behavior, and why sleep has the biggest payoff </li><li>Personal experience with sleep supports (CBD/THC, magnesium, mouth taping, nasal strips) </li><li>Recovery tools: foam roller, massage gun, hyperbaric naps </li><li>Sauna vs cold plunge vs cold shower (benefit vs effort)</li></ul><p><br>Connect</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br></p><p>Medical disclaimer</p><p>This episode reflects personal experience only and is not medical advice. Always consult qualified healthcare professionals for decisions about medications, supplements, and treatment.</p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Wed, 28 Jan 2026 06:00:00 -0800</pubDate>
      <author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/e689f067/51f52b1b.mp3" length="47181954" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://img.transistorcdn.com/ur5FcDzmBPFC_AVz1cjxNah8zPep2S4tsWz4XxzQtCw/rs:fill:0:0:1/w:1400/h:1400/q:60/mb:500000/aHR0cHM6Ly9pbWct/dXBsb2FkLXByb2R1/Y3Rpb24udHJhbnNp/c3Rvci5mbS83MDkw/MDgwMzYyMGE2OWU0/YjlhMjMzYjFlODUy/NTEwNi5wbmc.jpg"/>
      <itunes:duration>2947</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>Some days you wake up and feel sharp. Other days, you can barely get through the warm-up. In this episode of Parkinson’s: An Athlete’s Journey, we talk about the real day-to-day variability of Parkinson’s, and how we keep training anyway.</p><p>We get into what helps most (and what’s just “interesting”): the basics like training and sleep quality, plus recovery tools like foam rolling, massage guns, sauna, cold exposure, and the tradeoffs of time and energy. We also talk about things we’ve personally tried or considered, and why the best plan is usually the one you’ll actually do consistently.</p><p>What we cover</p><ul><li>“Good day / bad day” check-in and why the gym can change the whole day </li><li>Training environments: Parkinson’s community <em>and</em> being around serious athletes </li><li>“Cardio fiesta” Zone 2: making long sessions mentally tolerable </li><li>Sleep: broken nights, REM sleep behavior, and why sleep has the biggest payoff </li><li>Personal experience with sleep supports (CBD/THC, magnesium, mouth taping, nasal strips) </li><li>Recovery tools: foam roller, massage gun, hyperbaric naps </li><li>Sauna vs cold plunge vs cold shower (benefit vs effort)</li></ul><p><br>Connect</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br></p><p>Medical disclaimer</p><p>This episode reflects personal experience only and is not medical advice. Always consult qualified healthcare professionals for decisions about medications, supplements, and treatment.</p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Parkinson’s disease, Parkinson’s podcast, Parkinson’s symptoms, Living with Parkinson’s, Parkinson’s for athletes, Training with Parkinson’s, Exercise for Parkinson’s, Mobility and balance training, Parkinson’s fatigue, Tremor management, Recovery strategies, Longevity and performance, Biohacking for Parkinson’s</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>Yes</itunes:explicit>
      <podcast:transcript url="https://share.transistor.fm/s/e689f067/transcript.txt" type="text/plain"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>When the Clock Stops Defining You</title>
      <itunes:episode>3</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>3</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>When the Clock Stops Defining You</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
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      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/693b774d</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>What happens when you’ve spent your whole life letting a time or a ranking define you as an athlete, and then Parkinson’s changes the rules?</p><p>In this episode of Parkinson’s: An Athlete’s Journey, we talk about performance pressure, athlete identity, and how the “clock” can quietly become your self-worth. Todd breaks down why sports like rowing (and even swimming) can wire your brain to chase tenths of a second, and how that can mess with you when things shift.</p><p>We also get real about motivation. Parkinson’s can dull that internal “rocket fuel,” and sometimes you have to brute-force your way into the work. We talk about redefining the metric: effort, consistency, and showing up, even when your best today isn’t your best from ten years ago.</p><p>A few takeaways:</p><ul><li>The clock can be a tool, or a trap (especially for lifelong competitors).</li><li>Parkinson’s can change your access to “rocket fuel,” even when your grit is still there.</li><li>Sometimes the hardest lift isn’t the barbell, but walking through the front door.</li><li>Shift the metric: how hard you can go <em>today</em> matters more than how fast the clock says you went.</li></ul><p>Connect:</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br></p><p>Medical note: This podcast shares personal experience only. It is not medical advice. Always consult qualified healthcare professionals for medical decisions, including medications and training choices.</p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>What happens when you’ve spent your whole life letting a time or a ranking define you as an athlete, and then Parkinson’s changes the rules?</p><p>In this episode of Parkinson’s: An Athlete’s Journey, we talk about performance pressure, athlete identity, and how the “clock” can quietly become your self-worth. Todd breaks down why sports like rowing (and even swimming) can wire your brain to chase tenths of a second, and how that can mess with you when things shift.</p><p>We also get real about motivation. Parkinson’s can dull that internal “rocket fuel,” and sometimes you have to brute-force your way into the work. We talk about redefining the metric: effort, consistency, and showing up, even when your best today isn’t your best from ten years ago.</p><p>A few takeaways:</p><ul><li>The clock can be a tool, or a trap (especially for lifelong competitors).</li><li>Parkinson’s can change your access to “rocket fuel,” even when your grit is still there.</li><li>Sometimes the hardest lift isn’t the barbell, but walking through the front door.</li><li>Shift the metric: how hard you can go <em>today</em> matters more than how fast the clock says you went.</li></ul><p>Connect:</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br></p><p>Medical note: This podcast shares personal experience only. It is not medical advice. Always consult qualified healthcare professionals for medical decisions, including medications and training choices.</p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Wed, 28 Jan 2026 06:00:00 -0800</pubDate>
      <author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/693b774d/9abdd28a.mp3" length="35333731" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://img.transistorcdn.com/8GbHVCam4rn6xb9JG2_FNcnmosnNIfE7jrZOoHI2QLg/rs:fill:0:0:1/w:1400/h:1400/q:60/mb:500000/aHR0cHM6Ly9pbWct/dXBsb2FkLXByb2R1/Y3Rpb24udHJhbnNp/c3Rvci5mbS82MmNm/MTQ3NmE4ZTgxNGVh/ZTMyMDIyZTlmYTI2/Y2EwOC5wbmc.jpg"/>
      <itunes:duration>2206</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>What happens when you’ve spent your whole life letting a time or a ranking define you as an athlete, and then Parkinson’s changes the rules?</p><p>In this episode of Parkinson’s: An Athlete’s Journey, we talk about performance pressure, athlete identity, and how the “clock” can quietly become your self-worth. Todd breaks down why sports like rowing (and even swimming) can wire your brain to chase tenths of a second, and how that can mess with you when things shift.</p><p>We also get real about motivation. Parkinson’s can dull that internal “rocket fuel,” and sometimes you have to brute-force your way into the work. We talk about redefining the metric: effort, consistency, and showing up, even when your best today isn’t your best from ten years ago.</p><p>A few takeaways:</p><ul><li>The clock can be a tool, or a trap (especially for lifelong competitors).</li><li>Parkinson’s can change your access to “rocket fuel,” even when your grit is still there.</li><li>Sometimes the hardest lift isn’t the barbell, but walking through the front door.</li><li>Shift the metric: how hard you can go <em>today</em> matters more than how fast the clock says you went.</li></ul><p>Connect:</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br></p><p>Medical note: This podcast shares personal experience only. It is not medical advice. Always consult qualified healthcare professionals for medical decisions, including medications and training choices.</p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Parkinson’s disease, Parkinson’s podcast, Parkinson’s symptoms, Living with Parkinson’s, Parkinson’s for athletes, Training with Parkinson’s, Exercise for Parkinson’s, Mobility and balance training, Parkinson’s fatigue, Tremor management, Recovery strategies, Longevity and performance, Biohacking for Parkinson’s</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>Yes</itunes:explicit>
      <podcast:transcript url="https://share.transistor.fm/s/693b774d/transcript.txt" type="text/plain"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Just Got Diagnosed. Now What?</title>
      <itunes:episode>1</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>1</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>Just Got Diagnosed. Now What?</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">1a5eb5a1-1d1c-4112-bda3-52c9bae05935</guid>
      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/1396d922</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>What did Parkinson's look like before we knew it was Parkinson's? </p><p>In this first episode, Todd and Eric walk through the early signs they noticed, what the diagnostic process looked like, and the strange moment you leave an appointment with a folder of pamphlets and no real game plan. </p><p>They talk about the athlete brain and how it helps you push through hard days, but also how Parkinson’s adds a hidden “energy tax” to everything: movement, speech, expression, and even showing up socially as your best self. </p><p><br>What we cover</p><ul><li>Early “canary in the coal mine” signs during training: fatigue, slower splits, feeling off </li><li>Arm swing changes, a small tremor, and realizing it wasn’t just stress </li><li>Bloodwork, neurology, and the dopamine transporter scan that led to diagnosis </li><li>The mental hit of diagnosis (and the weird “I feel fine but now I’m not” effect) </li><li>How losing exercise (injury + life chaos) can change everything fast </li><li>Depression, isolation, and why community/support matters more than most people realize </li><li>A lived-experience conversation about treatments and experimenting, without pretending there’s one answer </li></ul><p>Connect</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br></p><p>Medical disclaimer</p><p>This episode reflects personal experience only and is not medical advice. Always consult qualified healthcare professionals for decisions about medications, supplements, and treatment.</p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>What did Parkinson's look like before we knew it was Parkinson's? </p><p>In this first episode, Todd and Eric walk through the early signs they noticed, what the diagnostic process looked like, and the strange moment you leave an appointment with a folder of pamphlets and no real game plan. </p><p>They talk about the athlete brain and how it helps you push through hard days, but also how Parkinson’s adds a hidden “energy tax” to everything: movement, speech, expression, and even showing up socially as your best self. </p><p><br>What we cover</p><ul><li>Early “canary in the coal mine” signs during training: fatigue, slower splits, feeling off </li><li>Arm swing changes, a small tremor, and realizing it wasn’t just stress </li><li>Bloodwork, neurology, and the dopamine transporter scan that led to diagnosis </li><li>The mental hit of diagnosis (and the weird “I feel fine but now I’m not” effect) </li><li>How losing exercise (injury + life chaos) can change everything fast </li><li>Depression, isolation, and why community/support matters more than most people realize </li><li>A lived-experience conversation about treatments and experimenting, without pretending there’s one answer </li></ul><p>Connect</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br></p><p>Medical disclaimer</p><p>This episode reflects personal experience only and is not medical advice. Always consult qualified healthcare professionals for decisions about medications, supplements, and treatment.</p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Wed, 28 Jan 2026 06:00:00 -0800</pubDate>
      <author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/1396d922/a69fe2d7.mp3" length="50865497" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://img.transistorcdn.com/hfWgxTiiiuTvhCPtuZWIPyuPifeEdZmx0ElnE8XFa0g/rs:fill:0:0:1/w:1400/h:1400/q:60/mb:500000/aHR0cHM6Ly9pbWct/dXBsb2FkLXByb2R1/Y3Rpb24udHJhbnNp/c3Rvci5mbS9hYzYy/YzhlNGY1MzhiNTNj/ZDMzYTM4MTQ5ZWI3/MmJhNy5wbmc.jpg"/>
      <itunes:duration>3177</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>What did Parkinson's look like before we knew it was Parkinson's? </p><p>In this first episode, Todd and Eric walk through the early signs they noticed, what the diagnostic process looked like, and the strange moment you leave an appointment with a folder of pamphlets and no real game plan. </p><p>They talk about the athlete brain and how it helps you push through hard days, but also how Parkinson’s adds a hidden “energy tax” to everything: movement, speech, expression, and even showing up socially as your best self. </p><p><br>What we cover</p><ul><li>Early “canary in the coal mine” signs during training: fatigue, slower splits, feeling off </li><li>Arm swing changes, a small tremor, and realizing it wasn’t just stress </li><li>Bloodwork, neurology, and the dopamine transporter scan that led to diagnosis </li><li>The mental hit of diagnosis (and the weird “I feel fine but now I’m not” effect) </li><li>How losing exercise (injury + life chaos) can change everything fast </li><li>Depression, isolation, and why community/support matters more than most people realize </li><li>A lived-experience conversation about treatments and experimenting, without pretending there’s one answer </li></ul><p>Connect</p><p>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><br></p><p>Medical disclaimer</p><p>This episode reflects personal experience only and is not medical advice. Always consult qualified healthcare professionals for decisions about medications, supplements, and treatment.</p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Parkinson’s disease, Parkinson’s podcast, Parkinson’s symptoms, Living with Parkinson’s, Parkinson’s for athletes, Training with Parkinson’s, Exercise for Parkinson’s, Mobility and balance training, Parkinson’s fatigue, Tremor management, Recovery strategies, Longevity and performance, Biohacking for Parkinson’s</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>Yes</itunes:explicit>
      <podcast:transcript url="https://share.transistor.fm/s/1396d922/transcript.txt" type="text/plain"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Parkinson's: An Athlete's Journey (Official Trailer)</title>
      <itunes:title>Parkinson's: An Athlete's Journey (Official Trailer)</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
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      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/f920b346</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>Parkinson’s changes everything.</p><p>But if you’re an athlete (or you’ve got that athlete mindset), you don’t just stop: you adapt, get strategic, and keep training.</p><p><br>In this short trailer, hosts <strong>Eric Von Froehlich</strong> (EVF Fitness, Row House) and <strong>Todd Vogt</strong> (Paralympic rower + coach) introduce <em>Parkinson’s: An Athlete’s Journey, </em>a podcast built for people navigating Parkinson’s in real time, with a focus on what actually helps in day-to-day life and training.</p><p><br><strong>What this podcast is about:</strong></p><p>Eric and Todd compare notes on the realities of living and performing with Parkinson’s, including:</p><ul><li>Training and performance adjustments</li><li>Recovery strategies</li><li>Sleep and energy management</li><li>Supplement and medication conversations (from lived experience, not medical advice)</li><li>The everyday problem-solving required to keep moving well and living fully</li></ul><p><strong>What to expect:</strong></p><p>You’ll hear straight talk, practical strategies, and honest conversations, plus guests and experts who can help:</p><ul><li>Break down what matters most</li><li>Challenge assumptions</li><li>Translate current research into usable, real-world takeaways</li></ul><p><strong>Who it’s for:</strong></p><p>Anyone living with Parkinson’s (and the people supporting them) who wants to stay <strong>strong, sharp, and functional, </strong>with an athlete’s mindset leading the way.</p><p><br><strong>Connect:</strong><br>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><strong>Disclaimer:</strong><br>This podcast may include personal experiences with treatments and medications, but it does <strong>not</strong> provide medical advice. Always talk with your healthcare team before making changes to your care.</p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>Parkinson’s changes everything.</p><p>But if you’re an athlete (or you’ve got that athlete mindset), you don’t just stop: you adapt, get strategic, and keep training.</p><p><br>In this short trailer, hosts <strong>Eric Von Froehlich</strong> (EVF Fitness, Row House) and <strong>Todd Vogt</strong> (Paralympic rower + coach) introduce <em>Parkinson’s: An Athlete’s Journey, </em>a podcast built for people navigating Parkinson’s in real time, with a focus on what actually helps in day-to-day life and training.</p><p><br><strong>What this podcast is about:</strong></p><p>Eric and Todd compare notes on the realities of living and performing with Parkinson’s, including:</p><ul><li>Training and performance adjustments</li><li>Recovery strategies</li><li>Sleep and energy management</li><li>Supplement and medication conversations (from lived experience, not medical advice)</li><li>The everyday problem-solving required to keep moving well and living fully</li></ul><p><strong>What to expect:</strong></p><p>You’ll hear straight talk, practical strategies, and honest conversations, plus guests and experts who can help:</p><ul><li>Break down what matters most</li><li>Challenge assumptions</li><li>Translate current research into usable, real-world takeaways</li></ul><p><strong>Who it’s for:</strong></p><p>Anyone living with Parkinson’s (and the people supporting them) who wants to stay <strong>strong, sharp, and functional, </strong>with an athlete’s mindset leading the way.</p><p><br><strong>Connect:</strong><br>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><strong>Disclaimer:</strong><br>This podcast may include personal experiences with treatments and medications, but it does <strong>not</strong> provide medical advice. Always talk with your healthcare team before making changes to your care.</p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Tue, 20 Jan 2026 11:01:47 -0800</pubDate>
      <author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/f920b346/cfad7009.mp3" length="1007841" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>63</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>Parkinson’s changes everything.</p><p>But if you’re an athlete (or you’ve got that athlete mindset), you don’t just stop: you adapt, get strategic, and keep training.</p><p><br>In this short trailer, hosts <strong>Eric Von Froehlich</strong> (EVF Fitness, Row House) and <strong>Todd Vogt</strong> (Paralympic rower + coach) introduce <em>Parkinson’s: An Athlete’s Journey, </em>a podcast built for people navigating Parkinson’s in real time, with a focus on what actually helps in day-to-day life and training.</p><p><br><strong>What this podcast is about:</strong></p><p>Eric and Todd compare notes on the realities of living and performing with Parkinson’s, including:</p><ul><li>Training and performance adjustments</li><li>Recovery strategies</li><li>Sleep and energy management</li><li>Supplement and medication conversations (from lived experience, not medical advice)</li><li>The everyday problem-solving required to keep moving well and living fully</li></ul><p><strong>What to expect:</strong></p><p>You’ll hear straight talk, practical strategies, and honest conversations, plus guests and experts who can help:</p><ul><li>Break down what matters most</li><li>Challenge assumptions</li><li>Translate current research into usable, real-world takeaways</li></ul><p><strong>Who it’s for:</strong></p><p>Anyone living with Parkinson’s (and the people supporting them) who wants to stay <strong>strong, sharp, and functional, </strong>with an athlete’s mindset leading the way.</p><p><br><strong>Connect:</strong><br>📩 Join our Community: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community">https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community</a><br>🎧 Listen and Subscribe: <a href="https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🎬 Watch on YouTube: <a href="https://youtube.com/@parkinsonsathletepodcast?si=uWaZy-8-Q-BahmT-">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>📸 Instagram: <a href="https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/">@parkinsonsathletepodcast</a><br>🤝 LinkedIn: <a href="http://linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast">Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey</a><br>🌐 Website: <a href="https://evfmethod.com/home">www.evfmethod.com</a></p><p><strong>Disclaimer:</strong><br>This podcast may include personal experiences with treatments and medications, but it does <strong>not</strong> provide medical advice. Always talk with your healthcare team before making changes to your care.</p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Parkinson’s disease, Parkinson’s podcast, Parkinson’s symptoms, Living with Parkinson’s, Parkinson’s for athletes, Training with Parkinson’s, Exercise for Parkinson’s, Mobility and balance training, Parkinson’s fatigue, Tremor management, Recovery strategies, Longevity and performance, Biohacking for Parkinson’s</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
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