
In this no-fluff conversation, Josh Bridges breaks down the real engine behind long-term performance: discipline, honest self-assessment, and loving the process more than the podium. He relives the lows—missing the 2015 season and getting exposed on heavy/deadlift work—and how attacking weaknesses turned into wins later. We get inside the decision to step away after a brutal high tibial osteotomy (2018), the identity shift that followed, and why fatherhood made competing optional—but standards non-negotiable. His line you’ll steal: “It’s not a goal if you don’t have a plan. It’s a hope.”
What you’ll learn
How to turn public failures into your next win (post-mortems that actually change training)
A simple system for programming weaknesses until they score points (not just reps)
The mindset to retire clean: identity beyond sport, family first, edge intact
Discipline vs. motivation: why plans beat hype and “hope” every time
Confidence vs. cockiness: how elite performers carry themselves under pressure
About Josh BridgesCrossFit Games legend and former U.S. Navy SEAL; multiple Games appearances, known for high-pain tolerance, comeback wins, and ruthless self-honesty.
Who this episode is forAthletes, coaches, and builders who want durable performance without burning down the rest of life.
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Keywords: Josh Bridges, CrossFit Games, discipline, weakness training, identity, fatherhood, knee surgery, high tibial osteotomy, failure analysis, confidence vs cockiness, Navy SEAL mindset, process over podium