The Any Given Day Podcast

Nate Palin

Inspiring action by sharing stories from and for military veterans who continue to touch the flame through physical, mental, and emotional challenges. Hosted by former Army Ranger and current Human Performance Coach, Nate Palin.

  1. Episode 20 - Let's F*****g Go

    1d ago

    Episode 20 - Let's F*****g Go

    OverviewViviana Morales Kolb is a 12-year Army veteran, mom of four boys, and self-described semi-professional manager of chaos who has made a second career out of dragging people back to life. This episode covers community, purpose, endurance challenges nobody asked for, range games, and the one question every veteran needs to answer — not who they used to be, but who they are now. About Viviana Morales KolbViviana Morales Kolb is an old crusty U.S. Army veteran, mom of four boys, community builder with a slightly unhinged relationship with endurance challenges, and believes that every person has value and a reason to keep showing up. After serving 12 years in the military, she found a new mission in helping veterans and others reconnect with purpose, community, and themselves. Through fitness, mentorship, and authentic conversations, she works to remind people that they are stronger than they realize and that their story is far from over. Known for her mix of grit, compassion, humor (her love language is making people laugh); Viviana has a passion for bringing people together and helping them see the value in their existence — especially during seasons when they may struggle to see it themselves. If you have a bad idea that involves miles, minimal sleep, or "just one more rep," she is probably signing up with you. As a semi-professional manager of chaos, who enjoys volunteering in her community, supporting fellow veterans, and raising energetic boys, she believes the greatest measure of success is the impact we have on others while we're still here. When she's not chasing endurance goals or organizing the next community fitness challenge, she's usually running on large doses of caffeine, embracing motherhood, answering approximately 47 questions from her children before 8 a.m., and doing her best to make the most of the time she's been given earthside while helping others do the same. Episode TakeawaysFind the community that speaks to you — there's a VSO, a run club, a range day, or a fly fishing crew for everyone. Find yours and stick to it.Start small and rev up slow — the veteran who's been on the couch for three months doesn't sign up for a marathon on day one. One walk around the block. That's it.Stop asking who you used to be — "I used to be a 14-minute two-miler" is not a plan. What are you now? What's going to make you proud now?Your story is not over — the best chapter doesn't have to be the one in uniformThe greatest measure of success is the impact you have on others while you're still hereTraining to say yes — Viv's whole approach to fitness is staying capable enough to say yes to the next stupid idea someone invites her toCommunity is the prescription — not a supplement, not a nice-to-have. The antidote to isolation is finding people who get it and showing up consistentlyRunning the Marine Corps Marathon with Stop Soldier Suicide — because keeping people alive is the mission that doesn't end at ETSEpisode LinksTeam RWB - teamrwb.org Wounded Warrior Project - woundedwarriorproject.org Marine Corps Marathon — marinemarathon.com Atomic Habits - jamesclear.com

    59 min
  2. Episode 19 - Make Yourself Indispensable w/ Brad Hollingsworth

    Jun 1

    Episode 19 - Make Yourself Indispensable w/ Brad Hollingsworth

    OverviewBrad Hollingsworth spent four and a half years as a Marine Corps infantryman, including time in a sniper platoon he wasn't supposed to be in, before an abrupt exit forced him to rebuild from scratch. What followed was a decade-plus career in human performance built entirely on the same principle that kept him in that sniper platoon: make yourself impossible to cut. This episode covers service, identity, the cost of burning your passion into your profession, and why the best thing a veteran can do after getting out is find something that has nothing to do with work. About Brad HollingsworthBrad Hollingsworth is a business owner, fitness industry professional, and United States Marine Corps veteran with more than 16 years of experience in human performance, fitness operations, tactical strength and conditioning, and wellness program management. Throughout his career, he has combined technical expertise in performance training with hands-on leadership, business development, and operational management experience. Brad is the co-founder of PEAK Athletics, a successful training facility in North Carolina that specialized in athletic development, tactical performance, and strength and conditioning. As a founder and operator, he played a leading role in the planning, financing, development, and day-to-day management of the business, helping grow the organization before ultimately selling his ownership interest when relocating out of state. His experience also includes serving as a Manager and Personal Trainer at O2 Fitness, Tactical Strength & Conditioning Coach at TOPS Athletics, Assistant Contract Manager for the North Carolina National Guard's Fit 2 Serve Program, and Police Wellness Coordinator for the Tempe Police Department in Arizona, where he developed and managed a comprehensive wellness program supporting the physical and mental health of law enforcement personnel. A former Marine Corps infantryman with multiple overseas deployments, Brad brings a disciplined, mission-focused approach to leadership and problem solving. He holds a Bachelor of Science in Exercise Science from the University of North Carolina Wilmington and a Master of Science in Population Health Science from Duke University. He also maintains several professional certifications, including Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist (CSCS) and Tactical Strength and Conditioning Facilitator (TSAC-F). Outside of his professional career, Brad is an avid outdoorsman and lifelong athlete. His interests include hunting, cave diving, strength training, and exploring remote environments that require physical preparedness, technical skill, and disciplined execution. These pursuits reflect the same values that have guided his professional career: resilience, continuous improvement, calculated risk management, and a commitment to excellence. Episode TakeawaysBe indispensableFind work — not a career, not a calling, just the next useful thing you can do better than anyone around youDon't turn your passion into your professionFind something that is not your job — a hobby, an adventure, anything that gives you full presence and zero career pressureBeware the case of the "I used to" — pick up something you dropped and start doing it again. Keep playing — veterans who go all-in on the next mission often forget to keep something in their life that's just theirsA lower ASVAB score than Brad is still a perfectly valid life choice — some of us just wanted infantryCave diving will give you a lower heart rate a hundred feet underwater than standing on land Episode LinksTwo Bravo Training Solutions

    59 min
  3. Episode 17 - You Didn't Die w/ Andy Holmes

    May 11

    Episode 17 - You Didn't Die w/ Andy Holmes

    OverviewAndy Holmes is a Marine veteran turned collegiate soccer strength and conditioning coach who brings a rare blend of military leadership, athletic performance, and self-aware humor to everything he does. This episode covers coaching philosophy, vulnerability, the role of sport in combating apathy, the value of the near-miss, and why it's okay to not be okay. About Andy HolmesA wellspring of curiosity, Andy has studied international politics, worked as a communications officer in the United States Marine Corps, and has spent the last seven years as a strength and conditioning coach across a wide range of sports, schools and professions. With stops at Georgetown University, The University of Texas at Austin, and 58th Special Operations Wing in Albuquerque, New Mexico, as Andy has worked to help develop athletes physically, he's worked just as hard on his own professional, mental, and emotional development. Currently, Andy works as an assistant sports performance coach at the University of Denver in Denver, Colorado where he directly leads physical development for the Women's and Men's soccer programs. Outside of a job that he thoroughly enjoys, Andy is incredibly lucky to have a brilliant and beautiful partner in adventure and relaxation, Arielle. Together they live in South Denver with their two dogs River and Bowie. Episode TakeawaysEmbrace the near-miss — almost making the lift, just missing the cutoff is nine times out of ten more valuable than the make. The world didn't end. You get to do it again.Create problems for your athletes to solve — coaching isn't about giving answers, it's about building the conditions for aha momentsFind something you care enough about to be disappointed by — apathy is the real enemy, and sport is one of the best antidotes we haveBe willing to fail if that's what it takes to win — two different things that are actually the same thingMake it undeniable and inevitable — keep attacking, stay relentless, and trust that it's comingGive people permission to not be okay — especially those who are always expected to be strong, capable, and fineIt's okay to not be okay — and saying so out loud is often the first stepThe fear of putting people out keeps veterans silent — communicate anyway, because the people around you want to know and they want to helpEpisode LinksUniversity of Denver Sports Performance Joshua Tree Coffee Veterans Crisis Line — 988, Press 1

    57 min
  4. Episode 16 - Stay Connected w/ Mark Christiani

    May 4

    Episode 16 - Stay Connected w/ Mark Christiani

    OverviewMark Christiani has coached at every level — D1 collegiate, Army H2F at Fort Bragg, Army Reserve, and now human performance management with O2X. This episode is a wide-ranging coaching conversation covering training variation, programming philosophy, the tactical human performance landscape, and what it actually takes to build culture inside large organizations. About Mark ChristianiMark Christiani is the East Coast Human Performance Integration Manager for O2X Human Performance. He previously served as an On-Site Human Performance Specialist with the U.S. Army Reserve 81st Readiness Division and as Brigade Lead Strength and Conditioning Coach for the Army's H2F Program at Fort Bragg. Mark's background also includes collegiate strength and conditioning experience and time as a competitive powerlifter. Episode TakeawaysEmbrace training variation across full cycles — the body craves movement diversity and narrow training eventually produces overuse injuries and mental stalenessA training framework with choices beats a rigid program — give yourself a list of things to hit and create variation through order, fatigue state, and exercise selectionGetting better at variations improves the primary lift — the conjugate principle applied broadly across athleticism, not just powerliftingKnow when you've met your goals and be willing to pivot — chasing numbers past the point of diminishing returns turns training into your whole personalityThe best tactical coaches are creative because they had to be — D2 and D3 coaches and early-career tactical coaches often outperform high D1 coaches in adaptive environmentsCulture change in large organizations takes decades — think of yourself as a plank holder and influence what you can, when you canInfluence the junior leaders now — the E4s, E5s, and O2s you reach today are the battalion commanders of tomorrowPolice and fire departments are ahead of the military in some human performance areas — less turnover, smaller scale, longer staff tenureStay connected — to your veteran community, to a run club, to something. Community is a longevity variable. Isolation is the enemy.Don't wait for command to lead — coaches can build culture from the bottom up without permissionEpisode LinksO2X Human Performance — o2x.com Soldiers to Sidelines — soldierstosidelines.org Team RWB — teamrwb.org NSCA TSAC — nsca.com/tsac Westside Barbell / Conjugate Method — westside-barbell.com

    55 min
  5. Episode 15 - Don't Take "No" for an Answer w/ Nick Umble

    Apr 27

    Episode 15 - Don't Take "No" for an Answer w/ Nick Umble

    OverviewNick Umble spent 20 years in Special Forces before walking off a military base and onto a college football field. Now he's competing at the national level in strongman — including top-ten finishes at Masters Nationals and the Arnold Masters Strongman World Championships — and building Sentinel Strength. This episode covers nutrition, identity, competition, coaching culture, and what happens when someone tells a Special Forces veteran he can't do something. About Nick UmbleNick Umble is a retired U.S. Army Special Forces veteran with a 20-year military career, including 14 years in 1st Special Forces Group (Airborne). Throughout his service, he led teams and supported high-risk operations in complex and demanding environments. After leaving the military, Nick pursued college football before transitioning into government contracting. Over the past five years, he has focused on competitive strongman, qualifying for national-level competitions multiple times and earning top-ten finishes at Masters Nationals and the Arnold Masters Strongman World Championships. He is the founder of Sentinel Strength, where he applies lessons from Special Operations, athletics, and competition to performance, discipline, and resilience. Episode TakeawaysUnderstand that "I eat pretty clean" is almost never true — if the results aren't there, the diet isn't what you think it isHire professionals for what you don't know — a nutritionist found what Nick couldn't find on his own, and it changed everythingKnow your constraints and variables — influence the variables relentlessly, accept what you can't changeDon't wait for command to be the difference — coaches and leaders at every level can build culture from the bottom upPlay the long game — cultural change in large organizations takes decades, not months. Think of yourself as a plank holder.Compete at something — structured competition gives purpose, identity, and a reason to train that transcends the gymWhen someone tells you that you can't, let "watch me" be the answer — the human body and psyche are capable of far more than others project onto youStrongman is more accessible than it looks — if you can squat, deadlift, and carry heavy things, you have a starting pointCommunity matters in training — the culture Nate and the Thor staff built left a mark that Nick still talks about years laterEpisode LinksSentinel Strength - https://www.youtube.com/@SentinelStrength Spiceology Derek Wolf Maple Bourbon seasoning — spiceology.com Arnold Masters Strongman World Championships - https://strength.events/2026-arnold-masters/ UHP (University of Human Performance) - https://uhp.com

    1 hr
  6. Episode 14 - Give Yourself Some Grace w/ Ben Seims

    Apr 20

    Episode 14 - Give Yourself Some Grace w/ Ben Seims

    OverviewBen Seims brings two decades of health and human performance experience, 24 years of Army National Guard service, and a nursing career to a conversation that goes far deeper than his credentials. In the most honest episodes yet, Ben shares a story of homelessness, multiple suicide attempts, and the long road to finding peace. About Ben SeimsBen Seims currently works with the Consortium for Health and Military Performance. He has over 20 years of Health and Human Performance coaching, education, and executive experience with a focus on Tactical Performance and Resiliency. He was career Army National Guard with over 24 years of service. He spent 10 years in the Infantry with a final position of Squad Leader, 14 years in the Nurse Corps, then served as Holistic Health and Fitness Director of Education at the National Guard Professional Education Center. Ben completed one combat deployment during OIF II, and several training missions to Thailand for Cobra Gold and Hanuman Guardian medical exercise serving as an AMEDD representative for the Washington National Guard's State Partnership Program with the Kingdom of Thailand. He was also a civilian nurse for over 17 years, with over 23 years of experience in long term care, acute care hospital, and home health settings. Episode TakeawaysRecognize that dragging a second boat behind you as an escape plan prevents you from fully fixing the one you're onUnderstand that clarity — while powerful — is painful, because you can finally see everything you did and can't undo itAccept that there is no certificate of arrival — health, recovery, and growth are a relentless pursuit with no finish lineBuild your merry band — the right people around you will literally save your lifeGive yourself grace — veterans carry disproportionate guilt and shame, and grace is not weaknessFeel what happens when you stop doing the work — Ben can feel it when he misses counseling, bike rides, meditation, breath work. The work is the thing.Share your story — you never know who you're going to impact or whose life you might saveFind your spiritual core — without purpose and vitality at the center, even a physically healthy person is floating alone in spaceEngage to disengage — there's more power in choosing not to win an argument than there ever was in winning itNature is non-negotiable — some of the best moments of your life have happened outside, and no photo does them justiceEpisode LinksMission Resilience San Antonio

    48 min
  7. Episode 13 - Build Something w/ JD Mata

    Apr 6

    Episode 13 - Build Something w/ JD Mata

    JD Mata shares how he applies his diverse professional and educational backgrounds to affect positive change in the humans he coaches and counsels. He reveals how discomfort experienced by physical training is actually a source of comfort for him compared to stepping back and letting others take the lead on occasion. About JD Mata JD Mata is a 10-year United States Air Force veteran with multiple deployments supporting Operations Iraqi and Enduring Freedom, as well as Combined Joint Task Force – Horn of Africa.  During his time in the military, he trained airmen and soldiers in small unit tactics, firearms proficiency, integrated defense, active shooter response, nuclear security operations, close-air support, detainee handling, and convoy operations.  Following his honorable discharge in 2014, he has been involved in Strength & Conditioning as a coach and human performance researcher in the military, law-enforcement, college, pro, and Olympic sport communities, resulting in multiple peer-reviewed scientific journal articles.  Over that time, JD has amassed 20 years of experience in the general and specific development of tactical and athletic skills that contribute to success and survivability in competition and in life.  Now pursuing a second master’s degree to become a licensed psychotherapist, JD is exploring the interconnection between childhood adversity, lifestyle, and resilience in special operations personnel.

    47 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
6 Ratings

About

Inspiring action by sharing stories from and for military veterans who continue to touch the flame through physical, mental, and emotional challenges. Hosted by former Army Ranger and current Human Performance Coach, Nate Palin.

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