My mission is to be your guide as you make your way through life getting better 1% every day. I believe that life is lived, truly lived, through adversity.
This week on the Podcast, Let’s connect two conversations happening in different worlds but asking the same question: does physical capability prove character? Politicians are filming bench press & pull up videos for clout. Martial arts instructors are letting their rank speak for their wisdom. Both are confusing competence with authority. This episode breaks down the difference between performing strength and embodying it, why titles and rank are not proof of virtue, how authority bleeds beyond its domain on the mat and in public life, and what healthy leadership actually looks like when nobody's filming. Drawing from a Psychology Today article on fitness displays by political leaders and a piece by coach Ryan Hoover on how respect turns into unchecked power in martial arts, this episode walks the line between necessary hierarchy and dangerous reverence.
A viral post on Hacker News asked a deceptively simple question: "How to be alone?" A 38-year-old man, freshly out of a twenty-year relationship, described his life as "solitary confinement with internet." Over 550 people responded with advice ranging from gym memberships to God.
In this episode, Gene Crawford takes that thread apart and builds a warrior's framework around it. The conversation covers the critical distinction between solitude and isolation, why coping is a trap that can cost you years, how discipline and routine become the floor you stand on when everything else collapses, and the concept of finding your "dojo," the place where real bonds form through shared effort and repeated presence.
Grounded in Stoic philosophy, Bushido principles, and practical experience, this episode is for anyone navigating a major life transition, dealing with loneliness, or trying to figure out who they are when nobody is watching.
Never give up. Never quit. Kaizen.
Most men love the 40% Rule. They think it means suffer more, push harder, destroy yourself and call it discipline. That's not strength. That's ego with a motivational quote attached. In this episode, Gene breaks down what the 40% Rule actually means, where it comes from, the neuroscience behind why your brain quits early, and the three biggest mistakes men make when applying it. If you've ever redlined yourself and called it toughness, this episode reframes the whole conversation.
When production becomes easy, discipline becomes rare. The beginner wants a hundred techniques. The master refines a handful until they're impossible to ignore. Restraint isn't weakness — it's the real skill.
Technology has made creating things easier than ever.
Design tools, AI, templates, and automation now allow almost anyone to build websites, generate UI, write content, and launch products in minutes.
But when production becomes easy, something unexpected happens.
The hard part is no longer making things.
The hard part becomes deciding what should exist at all.
In this episode of Warrior Mindset, Gene Crawford and Aaron Griswold explore why judgment, restraint, and communication are quickly becoming the most valuable professional skills in design and creative work.
We discuss:
• Why modern products suffer from feature overload
• The real reason saying “no” is difficult inside organizations
• Why “soft skills” may define the next generation of design leaders
• How AI is shifting value away from technical execution
• Why discipline and restraint may be the most underrated skills in modern work
When everything becomes possible, the real challenge is choosing wisely.
In this Debrief episode, as always we pull lessons out of the social media mess and apply them to real life.
Let's start with a refreshing post-game interview where a reporter chooses encouragement over “gotcha” criticism, then pivots into Mark Manson’s idea of the “emotional vampire” and why you must set boundaries without guilt. From there, the episode gets blunt about martial arts culture, especially modern jiu jitsu. Ego, posturing, toxic gym vibes, lack of curriculum, and performative toughness are driving people away.
The takeaway is simple: respect matters, discipline starts before you step on the mat, and your character shows most when nobody is watching.
Most people don’t stall because they lack discipline.
They stall because they refuse to confront their own faults.
In this episode of Warrior Mindset, we break down lessons from The Hagakure, not as ancient history, but as a practical framework for self-honesty, correction, and daily discipline.
This is not motivation.
It’s not mindset hype.
It’s about removing self-deception so progress becomes unavoidable.
You’ll learn:
If you’re tired of repeating the same mistakes and calling it “growth,” this episode is for you.
Listen carefully. The lesson is uncomfortable on purpose.
Fear doesn’t make you weak. It makes you reactive.
In this Warrior Mindset episode, we break down the real meaning of “Fear is the mind-killer” from Dune and why Frank Herbert’s warning has nothing to do with bravery and everything to do with judgment under pressure.
This is not a motivational talk. It’s a practical breakdown of what fear does to the human mind, how urgency collapses decision-making, and why disciplined people train to slow the system down before acting.
You’ll learn:
This episode is about restraint, control, and responsibility. Fear will always show up. The question is whether it decides for you.
Train accordingly.
Modern life is designed to eliminate friction. Faster apps. Fewer clicks. Instant results. But what does that cost us?
In this episode of Warrior Mindset, Gene and Aaron unpack the idea of friction by design and why effort, resistance, and intentional obstacles are essential for awareness, discipline, and growth. Drawing from martial training, stoic philosophy, and real-world experience, they explore the difference between useful friction that builds presence and pointless suffering that wastes energy. This is a conversation about discipline, attention, and why ease isn’t always progress.
Modern masculinity is stuck repeating ancient mistakes. By examining Achilles, Odysseus, and Beowulf, this episode breaks down three powerful warrior archetypes, and the predictable ways they fail. Rage, endurance, and legacy all matter, but none of them work alone. The real lesson is integration, restraint, and succession.
00:00 – Why Being “Dangerous” Is Failing Men
01:05 – Why Ancient Warrior Stories Still Matter
03:10 – Achilles: Rage, Ego, and the Reactive Alpha
09:40 – Why Rage Feels Powerful (and Why It Backfires)
12:30 – Odysseus: Endurance, Strategy, and Restraint
18:40 – Intelligence Without Humility Still Fails
21:45 – Beowulf: Legacy, Duty, and the Succession Problem
26:40 – The Warrior Sequence Most Men Miss
29:30 – Strength, Endurance, and Legacy Explained
32:00 – The Warrior Mindset Most Men Never Reach
Most people think recovery is about fixing the past. It isn’t. It’s about stopping the unnecessary drain on your life.
In this episode of Warrior Mindset, Gene sits down again with Dr. Scott Padgett for a blunt conversation about energy, control, and maturity. Not just in recovery, but in life. They unpack a simple truth that most people resist: if you are constantly angry, resentful, or obsessed with things you cannot control, you are leaking energy every day.
Addiction trains people to pour attention into the wrong places. Sobriety does not automatically fix that. Many people stay exhausted because they keep feeding grudges, replaying old arguments, and trying to control outcomes that will never bend to them.
This conversation is about discipline, not positivity. About restraint, not repression. About learning when to disengage, when to let go, and when silence is the strongest move available. You do not become powerful by carrying everything. You become powerful by choosing what is worth carrying at all.
This is not a recovery episode. It is a conversation about energy, clarity, and the cost of holding on.
Motivation is unreliable and waiting for it keeps you stuck. Real progress comes from discipline built through systems, not feelings. This episode breaks down why motivation fails and how to build a simple discipline engine that runs on consistency, environment design, and small actions that actually compound.