Leap Academy with Ilana Golan - Peloton’s Robin Arzón: From Hostage Survivor to Fitness Icon Inspiring Millions
Episode Date: January 6, 2026Robin Arzón’s leap from lawyer to fitness powerhouse wasn’t just a career shift; it was a radical reinvention. After surviving a traumatic hostage situation, she turned to running as a way to hea...l, reclaim control, and push past limits. What began as a coping mechanism evolved into a mission: to complete ultra-marathons, build a global fitness brand, and inspire others as a lead instructor at Peloton. Even after being diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes, Robin refused to be defined by anything but her unstoppable drive. In this episode, Robin opens up to Ilana about how she transformed trauma into purpose, made a bold leap into fitness, and became a global force in wellness with Peloton. Robin Arzón is a fitness expert, former lawyer, author, and motivational speaker. She is best known as an instructor at Peloton, where she inspires millions with her high-energy cycling and strength classes. In this episode, Ilana and Robin will discuss: (00:00) Introduction (01:37) Surviving a Hostage Situation (05:47) Discovering Running as a Healing Tool (08:51) From Casual Runs to Ultra-Marathons (11:29) Transitioning from a Law Career to Fitness (13:19) Landing a Job at Peloton with a Cold Email (15:49) Living and Thriving with Type 1 Diabetes (18:34) Juggling a Career, Motherhood, and Life’s Demands (21:39) Pushing Past Her Limits at the StriveX Challenge (24:54) Building a Global Brand Through Consistency (28:18) Swagger Society and Upcoming Cookbook (31:47) Learning to Trust Life’s Redirections Robin Arzón is a fitness expert, former lawyer, author, and motivational speaker. She is best known for inspiring millions with her high-energy cycling and strength classes as an instructor at Peloton, where she is also the Vice President of Fitness Programming. Robin is also a New York Times bestselling author of Shut Up and Run and Strong Mama, sharing her personal stories and fitness philosophies. She advocates for mental and physical strength, promoting the power of movement and mindset to achieve personal transformation. Connect with Robin: Robin’s Website: https://www.robinarzon.com/ Robin’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/robinnyc Resources Mentioned: Robin’s Books: Shut Up and Run: How to Get Up, Lace Up, and Sweat with Swagger: https://www.amazon.com/dp/0062445685 Eat to Hustle: 75 High-Protein Plant-Based Recipes (A Cookbook): https://www.amazon.com/dp/031659427X Robin’s Journal, Welcome, Hustler: An Empowerment Journal: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1454946342 Leap Academy: LeapCon is the #1 Conference for Reinvention, Leadership & Career — a powerful 3‑day experience designed to help you unlock what’s next in your career and life. 📍 San Jose, CA 📅 Feb 26–28, 2025 If you’re ready to step into clarity, confidence, and bold action, this is your moment. 👉 Grab your ticket before doors close at leapacademy.com/leapcon
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I liked myself better after a run.
Like, this was a totally selfish vehicle to befriending myself.
And I just needed to like myself a little bit more.
Robin Arzon, a global fitness leader, 27 marathons and ultra-marathons.
She's the vice president of fitness programming and head instructor at Peloton.
I was not an athlete growing up.
I would look at these magazines and read these members.
of these runners and I thought, oh gosh, well,
I don't know if I'll do that,
but what if I do my version of that?
I'm in this for the infinite hustle.
I don't want to do this and flame out and say,
oh gosh, yeah, wow, I had it in me for a year.
No, baby.
I want to be one of the most badass 90-year-olds you know.
You discovered your passion for running
after a very traumatic experience in New York.
How did that even come about?
The perpetrator walks in, he grabs me,
then it's chaos, expletives, guns, flailing.
I mean, it was truly like the horror movie.
And in that, you know, in that time, it was kind of like...
Robin Arzon, a global fitness leader,
27 marathons and ultra-marathons,
two New York Times bestsellers.
She's the vice president of...
of fitness programming and head instructor at Peloton and the founder of Swagger Society Media Company.
Robin, you discovered your passion for running after a very traumatic experience in New York.
Can you take us back in time?
Yeah, I mean, it was decades ago now, but it does feel like it was just the other day.
In fact, the other day I was walking by where the incident happened and I was just thrown.
It's funny when you look back at your own history and you're like, wow, I was right there, but also I'm a totally different person now.
But to get your listeners in up to date or into the story on a Friday afternoon, I was entering my senior year at NYU, so college age.
And I had planned to go to law school the following year.
And on the eve of graduation that year, so it was all very exciting times.
I was meeting my girlfriends after work.
I was at a paralegal at a law firm doing my corporate gig.
and a great day turned into a horror movie, really within minutes.
A man walked in saying that he'd been shot into the wine bar where we were sitting.
Tiny little wine bar in the East Village.
Basically, it was like there's a before and then an after.
That was the inflection point that it became the after.
I was held hostage that night by the man who had shot the gentleman who had walked in.
And so the perpetrator walks in, he grabs me.
then it's chaos, expletives, guns, flailing.
I mean, it was truly like a horror movie.
And by the time the police were called,
because bystanders had heard shots from outside,
by the time the police arrived,
there were probably 20 of us in this wine bar
with this man who was spewing hate,
wanting to kill everyone that was in there, including me.
And I was the person he held onto throughout this incident.
literally using me like a human shield, I became basically the pseudo-negotiator between him and the
NYPD who had gathered outside. The incident was a few hours long. And in that time, it was like
going from speaking to this man to speaking to the NYPD, to almost having the silent conversation
with myself that like, this was not going to be the end to my story. That thankfully was not.
And a really brave woman named Anne Margaret basically jumped him from behind and that ended the
takeover because they basically were able to get him on the ground. And that's when the NYPD were able
to rush in. I was standing in front of him. So all this action happened behind me. So I just
felt the sensation falling. So that was it. And that intensity and trauma brought me in a very
meandering way to running, which ended up being a very healing journey for me.
So before we go to the running, this is a fascinating.
And by the way, you talk about it and shut up and run.
So it's an incredible book.
Like I laughed.
I was frantic.
All the emotions come in that book.
And you are trying to actually talk to that person.
And I think that's fascinating.
Like you're trying to really understand him and engage with him.
Can you talk a little bit of what's going on in your head for a second?
Yeah, totally.
I didn't realize I was doing this at the time, but I was trying to humanize the folks who were in the room and I guess humanize him.
I didn't want to anger him further.
And I thought, oh, well, if he understands that we're daughters and brothers and friends and, you know, the folks in here also have loved ones.
And he was talking a lot about his loved ones.
And he was speaking in Spanish.
So I started speaking to him in Spanish.
I was just like, I just want him to be able to see us because there was just so much race.
And later, having spoken to real hostage negotiators, I realized that that is actually one of the
tactics that they use.
I didn't even know that I was doing that.
But that is what I did at the time.
And that's incredible because we actually had Chris Voss, who is a hostage negotiator from the FBI.
Yeah.
And he says exactly this.
And then I'm reading it in your book.
I'm like, how did Robin know?
It's somehow your instinct.
So you're getting over this.
I don't even know if you ever really get over this experience, but that takes you to running.
What happened?
Why running?
How did that even come about?
I don't know why running.
I was not an athlete growing up.
So it wasn't as if I was trying to relive high school glory days or something at a later point in my life.
But I was in law school and I don't know.
I think the added acute stressors of law school plus the trauma.
it was like something had to give.
After this hostage incident, I went back to school.
I took like two days off, went back to school, was back in the grind.
And I think ambitious folks get it.
It's like, okay, well, I'm just going to focus on the to do list and the calendar and the graduate.
You know, it's like the next finish line, so to speak, figuratively.
And a year later, when I was in law school, I was just feeling overwhelmed, to say the least.
And that I just looked at dusty shoes in my closet one day.
And I was just like, what if I just wore them?
And I literally put the keys down, you know, my car keys down.
I was like, what if I just went on foot to campus?
I have no idea why.
But I think we all have those moments that start as a whisper, just like a little fleeting curiosity.
And I grabbed onto it.
And it wasn't like, and then I was this marathoner and it was this rocky montage.
No, it was like these initial runs for a long time were horrendous.
But in those runs, I realized I wasn't thinking about.
law school stress or almost dying or the trial. What drummed up a lot of emotion as well
was this is when the criminal prosecution was happening. And I was a witness, but I was also in law
school. It was like a lot. I was unpacking a lot. But during the runs or walk jogs,
whatever they were, I wasn't thinking about all that. And then I realized, oh gosh, I have a tool
for my toolkit now that was pretty magnificent. And that's incredible, Robin, because if somebody
has not been a runner, and even if somebody has been a runner, the first few miles are
suffering. So what made you go again and again and again? Why not put the towel on this and
say, screw this, let's take the car? I guess it's this idea that we can choose our hard. And
it was two things. You can choose your hard. And the second is I liked myself better after a run.
this was a totally selfish vehicle to befriending myself. And I just needed to like myself a little bit more. And that's what the run did. And then it was like, yes, when I was doing marathons and ultramarathons and then I educated myself around it, I was like, oh my gosh, there are all these other benefits. But it really started with the conversation in between my ears. And again, I love the choose are hard. But you choose hard in all directions now. We'll
talk about this. I think you forgot the R. You know, like, you just go in all directions. We'll talk
about it. But how from that moment you went into career in Peloton? And there's also a big
difference, Robin, between I'm going to run three miles and I'm going to do ultramarathons. Take us there
for a second. I started learning about, you know, amazing endurance athletes. Like Rich Roll, who's now a
friend of mine, or Scott Jurek and Allison Felix, Paragoucher, these athletes who were just
incredible. And I got really inspired. I specifically got really interested in the ultra-running
world. And that is a world. If folks aren't part of that world, it's just really welcoming and
warm and accepting. And it's like, so what? You're not a five-minute mile. Like, let's just go out here
on a trail or let's just do it. Let's just put one foot in front of the other. And that was amazing. And
I like that you can put training in a calendar and do the work and achieve something. That just
felt really gratifying to me. And it gave me an outlet, you know, at this time when I was doing
ultramarathons, by this time I was practicing law in New York City. And it was obviously a lot
to balance all of that, but it at least gave me something that wasn't work. The meta message was
you like yourself better. You like yourself more after you've done this. And yes, I definitely
took it to some extremes, but that was also out of curiosity. It was like, well, if my body can do
this, why can't it do that? And one of my mantras I developed at the time, which I still use,
is why not me? I would, you know, read these magazines and read these memoirs of these runners.
And I thought, oh, gosh, well, I don't know if I'll do that. But what if I do my version of
that? Why not me? For those who don't know what's an ultramarathon, tell us a little bit.
It's technically anything over 26.2 miles or like 40-something kilometers, 44 maybe.
That can go a lot of distances.
You know, I have a friend Beck's Gentry.
She ran seven marathons and seven days around the world.
So there are obviously lots of ways to do it.
My farthest distance has been 100 miles or five marathons in five days across Utah for charity for MS research.
But very traditional distances are like 50K, which is around 31 miles, 50 miles.
100 miles. And then there are stage races, which you might do in two, three, four, five,
seven days, a lot of miles.
Crazy, crazy, crazy. And we actually had somebody that ran the Sahara, Charlie. Anyway,
we had some crazy people. Yes, Marathon to Saab is a great example. Yes. Amazing. Amazing.
I guess there's never a limit to the amount of craziness. But tell me, Robin, you then decide to
not go the law route and completely change. Can you take us there for us?
second? Why? I was counting down the minutes, the hours, if there are any lawyers who are listening or
watching. You know all about billable hours. So you're living in these increments, say six minute
increments. So I was very aware of time, hyper aware of time. And I would count down the hours
until I could run, lift, go to spin class. And I thought, oh my gosh, if I'm working out on a good
week, four days, am I really living for like four hours a week, three and a half hours a week?
That felt wild, especially having just had this experience in my early 20s. By my mid, late 20s,
I was like, screw that. If I put all this work to befriend myself, then I should put myself
in experiences that I feel excited about, at the very least challenged by in a way that gets me
excited. And it's interesting because practicing law wasn't like, oh, I hate every day. It was
just, I'm fine. And I believe that we deserve existences that are more than fine. And I think
that is the distinction that we don't often talk about. It's like this malaise that is pervasive
and is, what if you deserve better? We almost resign ourselves to this, oh, it's just okay.
No, it's not. So that was the impetus. And it was a really slow kind of burn. It was like a two-year
slow burn than I thought, oh my gosh, well, how the heck am I going to pay my bills? And I'm living in
New York City. And obviously, I'm super, super privileged to have this amazing gig, this corporate gig.
And there wasn't a clear path because it wasn't like, okay, now I want to go to business school.
And now I was truly like I felt like I was just walking in the jungle with a machete or something.
And I read an article about Peloton and I reached out to the company Cold. And that was really
what started my relationship with Peloton. And at that time, I had already been writing my first book,
shut up and run, as you mentioned. And I was coaching runners and teaching spin classes and
doing jill of all trades, I guess, because I was just trying to plant a lot of seeds and seeing what
would sprout. So how do you reach out out of the blue completely cold to Peloton? I think there are
a lot of our listeners. They might have a dream, right? But it scares them. Well, maybe it's not for me.
Or maybe I don't know and I don't know anybody and how can I make it work. How do you reach out?
energy is such a currency.
Obviously, these interactions are really great when they're in person, but this happened to be
an email.
And I was putting in the reps, so to speak.
I would get into a taxi cab and be like, I love running.
Do you love running?
Like literally anybody who would listen, I went to the 2012 London Olympic Games as a spectator
and as like kind of a blogger.
And I was just putting in the reps, putting in the reps, recording, writing, talking,
anybody who would listen.
I'm excited about this.
I have a point of view as a Latina, as a woman, as an urban athlete, as a hustler,
and I wasn't seeing it represented.
So I was like, let me just find the right partners, the right people who also want to tune
into this frequency.
They want to listen to the radio station that I'm emitting, so to speak.
So I basically poured all of that that I had been honing and crafting into the email specific
to Peloton.
I was like, I did a vision board in the business quadrant of my vision board.
I didn't even know what this meant at the time,
but I wrote disruptive storytelling plus technology.
And I had a picture of a little Apple computer.
I really didn't know what this meant.
But when I read about Peloton, I was like, oh, my gosh, this is it.
And truly, it was a cold email to, like, info at peltoncycle.com.
And they read my email and responded a few days later.
And then I auditioned.
This was before the company had opened its New York City studio.
And so I auditioned in the corner of the corporate office that only,
I only had like 25 employees, startup vibes for sure, and they changed my life.
We need to pause for a super brief break, and while we do, take a moment and share
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I love energy as a currency because it's true.
There's some people that the minute you get in the room,
they just suck the air out.
And there's people that it's opposite.
It's like it's just so inviting.
But you get into Peloton and you do all these things running, et cetera.
Can you share some hard moments and something challenging and how you tackle them?
So actually, on the eve of joining.
Peloton, and I was like, oh my God, this is it. This is my dream job. I've got a steady income
against doing something I'm obsessed with. And probably like a week before I started a Peloton,
I was feeling really fatigued and lethargic and getting up at night, frequent urination
during the night. I was like, what is going on here? And I thought it was ultra training or jet lag.
I had just gotten off an international trip visiting my sister in India, who was working in India at the time.
and we explain away everything often.
And I was trying to explain it away.
My mother's a physician.
She was like, absolutely not.
This is a sign of type 1 diabetes.
I didn't even know what an endocrinologist was,
but I made an appointment that Monday,
blood work and discovered as an adult.
My pancreas was producing little to no insulin.
And this training cycle for this ultramarathon,
I didn't even notice, but I was losing weight,
all these things.
So that week was really dark.
daunting. And I knew I was basically going to be then working out in front of folks. I mean,
at this point, it was only probably 10 people on the leaderboard. But, you know, it was really,
really daunting. And I was starting this new venture. And I obviously wanted to feel great and prepared.
And I was neither. But, you know, I just focused on what I could control. And I educated myself
with this new technology and what I would now need, new medical team, new doctor names, new medical
terms. I asked questions when I didn't know what I needed to know. And I focused on what I could
control. The important thing also is to kind of remember your North Star because I was in a lot
of different rooms where it was like, oh, now that you're type one, ultra training, oh, now that
you're this and that. And it's folks, I think most of the time do mean well, but you can't make
decisions based on somebody else's doubt because they're not you. And if I would have listened to
the very well-meaning naysayers, who I think were just being protective, I never would have
continued to join Peloton. And for sure, I wouldn't have continued to become the athlete that I am now.
You'll hear a thousand things from different people, whether it's in entrepreneurship, whether it's
running, whatever you try to do, there's always the people, the voices that will try to keep you
safe. I don't necessarily think that they mean bad, but it's exactly not what you need to hear
at that moment. You can listen, but you need to decide what you're actually going to listen to,
what you're actually going to take their advice or not. Let's talk about it, because you do
all of this with two tiny ones, and I saw you in Necker Island. I mean, can we talk about
this for a second? Like Richard Vend's in Private Island, an adventure race, and you are
with two tiny kids, nursing one, running, biking.
Seriously, like, we were all dead there and you were doing also motherhood.
I have no clue how.
I mean, listen, I think moms, caregivers, we just figure it out.
And, you know, I'm really grateful for help.
I mean, my husband is an incredible partner.
We did bring our nanny on that trip because otherwise that would have been totally unrealistic for the care.
It would have been disaster, absolutely.
And I think I'm just in the season.
I will look back to this time in my life.
I'm certain.
Even the hard days and be like, gosh, what I wouldn't give for that amount of chaos in certain ways?
You know what I mean?
For me, these are the good old days.
So I'm okay maximizing.
I'm okay with more.
Yes, that requires some element of protecting my peace.
There are a lot of social engagements that I say no to, you know, because I'm business.
Basically, it's like business and family life. And there's a lot of the in-between, you know, the happy hours, the things, the charity events, like stuff that I would love to attend, but it's usually a no. And that's why. And then it's also really understanding very clearly what a yes looks like. I think before becoming a mother, there would be opportunities that came my way that I'd be like, well, I just have to do this because someone so did it or this person, you know, it's just I have to do it. And it's like, well, no, you don't. Why? What does a yes even look
like. And I think, especially after you've had some successes or sometimes it begets something else and
it's like the next expected thing, it's like, you publish one book. It's like, oh, what about the next book?
You do one race. Oh, what about the next? And it's like, oh, wait, but what's my yes? I'm proud that I've been
able to read the tea leave, so to speak, for my own definition. You know, when that's deciding whether I'm
going to do a partnership, whether I'm going to take on a certain brand deal or a certain project. I really try to
internal rather than my initial, oh, I have to do it. I use my no pretty judiciously.
And this is so, so, so important because every time you say yes to something, you're actually
saying no to something else. And the question is, what is the no? The no is time with family.
The no is time at work. The no is time on your personal branding. Whatever that is, there is
always a no when you say yes to one thing. So you just need to figure out what am I shutting the
door on when I do say yes. And sometimes it's totally worth it.
sometimes know. So I love that. And the way you were able to balance it all, I thought that was
really inspiring. I personally don't bring my family with me because I was just like, when I'm
working, I'm working, when I'm doing this. Like, I need to compartment. But it was just beautiful
to see how it's all part of you. But let's talk about that adventure before you go back to Peloton
because I still want to go there for a second. But we're going to this adventure race or whatever
that is, crazy biking, like running, even swimming for you, which I want to talk a little bit
about. What was it like for you? Yeah, being on Neckar Island with Richard Branson for the
Strive X was, I mean, I think it was an adventure. It was pushing yourself physically
so you can drop the pretense mentally or emotionally. I think there's always this tipping
point with physical endurance and strength and
activities that you kind of just, you don't have the energy anymore to have the wall up. And I think
for especially high achieving people, that is a really unique environment, especially when you're in
front of somebody like Richard Branson who, if you're going to Neckar Island, you admire and know
who Richard Branson is. And so you can go much deeper and have much more connected experiences
when you have that physical element. And I think the way that we experienced the trip,
you know, it was about what, like 30 of us. So just big enough where you feel like you can actually
connect with folks. And it was really paired, the physical activities every day, call it four to six
hours of activities every day, were paired with really meaningful conversations and workshops at night.
So for me, it was like a dream, a dream week. And yeah, you mentioned the swimming. So I didn't
know how to swim. I would like, I could like doggy paddle, but I really didn't know how to swim
before this. And I was one of the co-hosts of this Strivex event. And I thought, okay, well, I have
to do all the stuff, right? Like, I can't opt out. And I had about three months. And I was like,
okay, I have a finish line, so to speak, and I really learned. I truly, I hired a coach,
and I went to the Long Island Sound, and I did open water swims, and it was really, really
hard, and it's interesting. And I did do the swim. I swam a mile, freestyle, you know,
no swimmies, no anything, no unassisted. I was really proud of that. But if you were to ask me,
are you a swimmer, I would still say no, because in my mind, and I remember this point also
in the beginning of my running journey,
I took me the longest to say I was a runner
and I was already doing races and whatever.
And I think in my mind,
it's such an interesting example of
we become the stories that we tell ourselves
because I have done a lot of different things
and played a lot of different roles in my life.
And swimmer is yet to be,
and I think next summer, maybe I'll solidify it,
but I think I need a few more of those moments
where I'm just like putting myself in the ocean
or putting myself in the pool
and remembering that neurological piece of me
that I guess developed, but I don't know. It's so funny how we can just, we can do a lot of things,
but then there are always these pockets of hard that it takes our identity to embrace.
That's such a powerful quote. I literally wrote it down because I don't see myself as a swim
as far as I'm concerned, I kind of survived the swim. And it was the first time I ever needed to
swim when I was at four and a half kilometers. I'm like, that was brutal. But I just, I will never
call myself a runner or a biker or a swimmer, but it's so interesting how you create identity
out of things. So you grow up in Peloton, but beyond Peloton, you start creating this mega
brand that has, I don't know how many millions, Robin, like I can't keep up, but there's millions
of people that the minute they hear Robin Arz and I'm like, oh, now you're the cool kid, you know, if you
know her, you're cool. So how did you build that kind of a brand? You know, I think the brand,
I mean, I'm sure there are a lot of marketers who have varied opinions on this, but I think that
the brand builds itself through consistency. And for me, it's always been about using my voice,
even when it shakes, and trying to hold space maybe for folks who feel like that wellness isn't
for them, or maybe they didn't grow up seeing examples of folks who looked like them or talked
like them in some of these spaces, especially traditional white male spaces. And, you know,
as a woman, as a Latina, I truly try to hold space for lots of different types of communities,
but more so it's a value of, I think I live, the value of a hustler and somebody who really is
gritty but appreciates a work ethic and is willing to define their own finish line. And that
really, it still excites me. So I guess reputation becomes a form of wealth. And I think that
the brand builds itself when you show up consistently. And I have done that. You know, I've been
at Peloton 11 plus years. And, you know, I've been in wellness for longer than that. So a lot of
different moments where you can show up and tell a consistent story in that time. But you do tell a very
consistent story. And by the way, there's also a book, right? Welcome Hustler. Yes, welcome Hustler.
Right? Because I think it does take some hustling for sure. But also that consistency, Robin, again, most of us don't feel like posting every day or don't feel like doing something every day. And you're still able to, even though you have the brand and you have a lot of followers, you will still get up every morning and you'll or whatever that is, right, whatever the cadence is. And you'll still post something and you'll still give back and you'll still.
think about what are my followers need to see right now. What drives you? You know, I call myself
a fire starter. Like I think in a lot of different environments, I can be the spark for somebody's
curiosity, for someone's motivation, for someone's excitement. I found that that is my purpose.
And the different hats that I wear, whether it's mother, entrepreneur, business person,
spin instructor, strength coach, running coach, that is the three.
through all the partnerships, all the brands, all the experiences, I want to light fires under
people. And I want folks going back to that malaise, going back to that, I'm okay. Yes, being okay
is better than being a lot of worse things, especially clinically, but you deserve more.
Why not you? That has always been, not always, but since adulthood, that's been a very
pressing question. Why not you? And then I want to offer folks tools, a tool. A tool.
toolkit for how. Because if the why is big enough and strong enough and loud enough inside,
the how is always going to be achievable. And that's what started also the Swagger Society community
and you're continuing with another book launch. So tell us a little bit, Robin. What is going
on? What are you continuing? What is the Swagger Society? Yeah. So Swagger Society Media Company
is really became a lifestyle membership club that we spun out a year and a half ago to go deeper
with folks who are of the growth mindset, who wanted to go a little bit deeper than the traditional
Instagram post or Facebook post with me. And so we have quarterly, we call them Queendom Halls.
And we gather. And it's an extension of my master class outside of social media, right? So we built
our own private app. And Swagger Society now is taking these.
conversations to media partners and brand partners. And we host in real life events every single
year, twice a year. And this really becomes an opportunity for the community to gather in real
life and connect both virtually and in person and have conversations. So whether it's me
interviewing the editor-in-chief of women's health or whether it's bringing an amazing person,
former athlete. You know, I interviewed Mark Cuban, for example, you know, as part of a conversation
teeing up to a bigger society. So these are things that if I'm curious about it and I have
questions about it in related to leveling up one's life and growth mindset values, then that's
under the umbrella. And we're going to be spinning out licensing and merchandise and clothing.
And so it's the place that lives for me to play, but also play with purpose.
We need to pause for a super brief break. And while we do take a moment and share this episode
with every single person who may be inspired by this because this information can truly
change your life and theirs. Now, every cool opportunity you will ever find is most likely
from a hidden market. It's the people who think about you when you're not in the room and
bring the right opportunities to you. This means that the people you hang out with truly matter.
That's why we created our flagship live event in San Jose, California, in the heart of Silicon
Valley. It's February 26 to 28th and is the number one conference for reinvention, leadership,
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It has speakers like the former president of Starbucks
and many other leaders, including yours truly, myself.
And I'd love to personally welcome you,
give you a hug, and hear what you think about the podcast.
We'll have many networking opportunities, photo opportunities,
and we already know every single person after this event
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Don't miss out where the most impactful leaders hang out in February.
So go to leapacademy.com slash leapcon.
I will see you there.
I'm looking forward to seeing what we can blend with careers and that together, but that's still in the making.
So talk to me a little bit about your cookbook. That is coming. It's a big one for you. It is.
2025 is my big cookbook preparation year. I am literally recipe testing right now. It will be out in
26. And this is such a cool. So I'm a plant-based athlete. I'm vegan. I've been vegan for over 12 years. So that means I don't eat meat or dairy eggs. And I basically thrive on plants.
And I wanted to create a protein-packed plant-based cookbook for folks. Yes, of course, there are
plant-based folks who are like, wow, great, but I need more recipes. But for me, I'm taking a wider
approach, a broader approach. This is for the person who just wants to increase their protein
portfolio. Like, you look at your investments. It's like, this is what I want for folks,
is to think, okay, maybe tonight I'll try one of these recipes. You know, obviously, I believe
it's great for the environment and it's great for our bodies. But as an athlete, I have lived,
this, and I know as someone who trains multiple hours a day, six days a week, I know that you
can fuel intentionally with these recipes. That's the goal, is to put something out in the world
that allows individuals, athletes, families, and just the plant curious to have a resource.
I love that. And also, it's very real. Like, it is how I cook. It's not like, okay,
we need to curate this recipe for 72 hours and then you need this special dish and this pot
and this special machine. No, this is like how I cook in my kitchen. I have 15 minutes. My kids are
going crazy. I am starving. This is what I eat. That's the goal. That sounds a lot more for me.
So when you're looking back, Robin, what would be some of the things that you wish you could say
to your younger self.
Oh, gosh.
There were closed doors, and they say, like, be grateful for the redirection.
I don't know.
There's some kind of saying that I'm blanking on now, but the many moments where I felt like
I was being redirected.
And now I look back and I'm like, oh, my gosh, if I didn't do this, that that wouldn't
have lent me to that and then I don't meet my husband.
If I don't do this and that or that, then I don't end up a Peloton.
And as somebody who's ambitious, as a hustler, finding the way to continue to hustle
but also trust in closed doors and life's timing, that I'm proud of.
So I would tell the younger version of myself, you will find the balance of your hustle
with life's and the universe's signs and timing.
And I wouldn't have believed you.
I would have just been like, but here's my to-do list and here's my calendar and I'm going to force it.
And it's just, no, girl, that's not it.
So I think that there's a more nuanced energy that I have now to the hustle, which gosh,
I'm grateful for it because that means that my hustle has a long game.
Like, I'm in this for the infinite hustle.
I don't want to do this and flame out and say, oh, gosh, yeah, wow, I had it in me for a year.
No, baby.
I want to be one of the most badass 90-year-olds you know.
I believe you.
But I think what you just said is so powerful because I think the balance is really hard for
high achievers, right?
If you're driven and you're a high achiever, when something fails for you, you're
trying to continue.
I know I did, and it took me time to realize this is a dead end.
You're knocking on the door that is not going to open.
If it is, it's not where you want to be anyway.
So you better trust and go with what looks right.
But at that point, it feels very hard.
So can you share for us a hard moment that you needed to like lean into and say,
you know what, this is probably the wrong door that I'm knocking on?
I have two examples.
So one, before the Pelton entered the chat, so to speak, I've always been really into fashion
and very kind of enamored by design.
And I thought, okay, this is back in the day, back in the day.
I had already left my law firm, and I was flailing about New York City.
And I thought, okay, I'm going to start a leggings.
I'm not starting to have leisure company, as if that's a casual endeavor.
And I put money into the company.
I was sourcing designers, fabric was coming from Asia.
It was starting to be birthed, but I was also writing my book and I was, you know,
I was doing all these other things.
And you don't just casually do this, right?
And I realized, oh my gosh, if you don't pull the plug, if you don't just eat the cost
now, you are going to be such a failure in this.
And that inability or unwillingness to see that through really felt like a failure.
And then fast forward to now, I am working on an entirely crafted line with Peloton that is going to be coming out later this year.
And it is like, right, girl.
So that distinguishing between a failure and a pivot is really tricky.
And sometimes you don't know which one it was until you zoom out a little bit.
But I'm very grateful for that.
And then a more recent one, a more concrete one, I was signed up for the New York City Marathon in 2024, and I thought to myself, okay, you're one year postpartum, you must run this race, you have this entry, people would kill for this entry. And the long runs were not sitting well with my body. Like I think I was still healing a little bit from having Atlas, my son. And again, it was like four weeks of just like, try again, lace up, do it again. You know how to do this. You've done 27 marathons. You got this. Number 28.
and I just had this crushing 10-mile air where I could barely eke it out. And I was like,
girl, why? So I pivoted. And I pivoted in a way that made my life so much more enriched.
I ended up signing up for a high-rox competition, which is eight one-k runs and eight strength things.
And that 2024 training cycle was so much more rewarding because I pivoted. And yes, I might have
eked it out. Yes, I might have crossed that New York City Marathon finish line. And to what end?
if I was miserable, then what was the point? And I think, yes, there is going to be a level of
discomfort in any of these achievements. So you're kind of like, oh, is this discomfort? Or am I just
like cutting out too early? So I don't know. You know, I can't answer that for folks.
It depends. But for me, those are two examples of it was totally the right call to pivot.
And I do believe that creates the muscle that you need to build in order to do the next things
that you want to do. And I think that's just so powerful, but we need to sometimes tell our stories
from the scars, not the wounds. So when there's a really open wound, it's sometimes really hard
to admit to the story, but we needed to wait a little bit until it scars. So Robin, for people
are listening or watching, and they're saying, I want to elevate my career. I know I'm a
fraction of who it could be. I want my name out there. I want to make an impact.
what would you say to them?
I think that those are all the right questions.
Now it's figuring out what story are you telling yourself
and then what story are you telling the world
through how you're showing up,
how you send the text, how you sign the email,
how you show up to the event.
These are all branded moments.
And so earlier when I said the brand builds itself,
it's like these are the small inflection points.
Obviously education is a huge passion of yours.
It's like, how are you educating to stay relevant?
Finding the spark, finding the question that you want to answer for the world, that's a big.
But once you have that, that's such an amazing aha that it's like, yo, now you've got to run with it.
And you might be like run into a few wrong directions and be like, oh, not that way, not that way, not that way.
But you still carry that charge with you.
And that is so exciting.
And I think if you're like, oh, gosh, I don't know.
I'm flailing.
I don't know what I like.
Continue to have the conversation with yourself.
Lead with curiosity rather than judgment.
And I say this really seriously, develop a running practice, develop a movement practice.
These movement practices where we look under the hood of how we're speaking to ourselves,
that directly informs how we are showing up in the world.
And I continue to feel like a creative person, even in the throes of motherhood and all this,
because I continue to carve out those movement practices that allow me to befriend myself.
And then on a great day, I'm like, oh my gosh, I'm journal.
I'm putting notes on my phone.
I'm like, yeah, I've got an idea for this, an idea for that, an idea for that.
Because movement is fertilizer for the brain.
So if you feel stuck, move your body.
Powerful, Robin.
Thank you, as always.
So amazing to see you months after running and biking.
And you're amazing as always.
Thank you.
This was so fun.
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