Listen

Description

The Vitality Collective Podcast is a health and fitness podcast and performance podcast focused on strength, longevity, and real-world performance, bridging the gap between health and performance.

Hosted by Dr. Jeremy Bettle, PhD -- an internationally recognized expert in Human Performance with over 20 years of experience working with elite athletes and high performers -- this podcast brings world-class expertise straight to you.

Built from elite sport and applied to real life, it breaks down what actually drives resilience, health, performance, and long-term capability.

Most high performers are not failing because they are doing too little.

They are failing because their training does not fit the life they actually live. Josh Sprague, who has completed more than 500 races across every distance imaginable while running three bootstrapped companies, breaks down why a four-day training week consistently outperformed his six-day attempts and why that result is not surprising at all.

If you have been asking yourself how to stay fit and healthy without your training schedule collapsing every time work gets heavy, this is the episode for you.

What's inside:

If you are a busy entrepreneur or executive who keeps building the perfect training plan only to miss half of it and feel like you have failed, this episode will help you redesign your approach around the life you actually have. 

Listen to the full episode of The Vitality Collective Podcast with Dr. Jeremy Bettle.

Guest Bio

Josh Sprague is a serial entrepreneur, endurance athlete, and product designer based in Round Rock, Texas. He founded Orange Mud in 2012 after tearing apart a gun holster in his garage to build a better hydration pack. Fourteen years later, he runs three companies -- Orange Mud (hydration gear), Seven Clay (custom apparel), and Anvil & Acre (fractional CMO services) -- all bootstrapped, all profitable, all built from real-world problems he refused to tolerate.

Links

www.orangemud.com

Instagram: @orangemud

LinkedIn: @JasonSprague

Three Actionable Takeaways

  1. If your program is failing, just go do something. A walk, hike, bike, or run all count. Any activity beats inactivity.

  2. Go slow at least once a week. Even a 15-to-30-minute walk on a day when nothing else fits is worthwhile and better than skipping entirely.

  3. Work on the mindset. Remember why you are doing this. If the answer is fun, then let it be fun. Stop letting rigid training schedules prevent you from enjoying the activity itself.

Key Insights