Parkinson's: An Athlete's Journey Titelbild

Parkinson's: An Athlete's Journey

Parkinson's: An Athlete's Journey

Von: Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt
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Parkinson’s: An Athlete’s Journey is for athletes navigating Parkinson’s, the coaches and clinicians who train them, and anyone who wants real-world strategies for performance and longevity. Hosted by Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt, the show focuses on tactical takeaways: how to train, recover, manage symptoms, and stay consistent when the rules keep changing. Expect honest conversations, tested routines, and guest experts who go deeper on what works.© 2026 Fitizens LLC Fitness, Diät & Ernährung Gymnastik & Fitness Hygiene & gesundes Leben
  • How Are You...Really? Parkinson’s, Honesty, and the Athlete Mindset
    Feb 25 2026

    “How are you doing?”

    For most people, it’s small talk. With Parkinson’s, it can feel like an exercise in figuring out what people really want to hear, and how much truth is too much.

    Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich talk through the lived experience of that moment, when you want to answer honestly, but the honest answer can come out sounding like a list of what isn’t working. They unpack how the answer changes depending on who you’re talking to: acquaintances get the quick “I’m doing alright,” while family and people you love can be harder, because you don’t want to overburden them either.

    From there, the conversation shifts to what anchors them: training. They discuss Concept2 rankings, chasing benchmarks, and Todd's latest results while training in an altitude room.

    They also talk wrist dexterity limitations, compensation patterns that can quietly lead to tendonitis, and why athlete-level body awareness can be an unexpected advantage when navigating a progressive condition.

    This one is all about navigating honesty and continuing to show up, even when the answer isn’t simple.


    Key Takeaways:

    • “How are you?” isn’t small talk when you live with Parkinson’s. Navigating honesty is part of the training.
    • Athlete awareness helps distinguish Parkinson’s symptoms from normal soreness, fatigue, and aging.
    • Compensation patterns (like wrist limitations leading to arm overuse) can create secondary issues.
    • You don’t stop chasing performance. You just adjust the math.


    Key Moments:

    00:40 – Weekly check-in: symptoms vs. soreness
    03:15 – The “How are you?” dilemma: how honest is too honest?
    08:20 – Athlete body awareness as an advantage
    14:05 – Concept2 logbook + global ranking (16th/17th worldwide)
    18:40 – Altitude-room training and performance metrics
    24:10 – Wrist dexterity, compensation, and tendonitis
    31:55 – The balance between realism and resilience
    39:20 – Closing mindset: keep training, adjust expectations

    Follow / Connect:


    🔔 Subscribe: https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/
    📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/
    🌐 Website: https://www.ericvonfrohlich.com/podcast
    💼 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athlete-s-journey-podcast/?viewAsMember=true


    Disclaimer:


    Personal experience and education only, not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical decisions.

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    22 Min.
  • Mindset Under Pressure: Parkinson’s, Performance & Purpose
    Feb 18 2026

    Parkinson’s doesn’t just challenge your body. It challenges your identity.

    In this episode, Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich talk candidly about what happens when Parkinson’s forces a shift in career, competition, and self-perception: what do you do when the thing that defined you starts changing?

    They explore nostalgia, gratitude, job hunting, and the difference between outcome goals and process goals. They discuss the mental highs and lows of not giving up, and redefining what competing looks like now.


    Key Takeaways:

    • The present moment matters most. Anxiety lives in the future; regret lives in the past. Training happens now.
    • Process > outcome. Focusing on daily actions compounds more than chasing times, rankings, or validation.
    • Athletic identity evolves. At some point, every athlete faces decline: Parkinson’s just accelerates the timeline.
    • Grace is part of the work. Transitions require patience with yourself.
    • Say yes. Community and new experiences (like inclusive sailing) can shift perspective fast.

    Key Moments:

    00:32 – Atmospheric river story + environmental exposure questions
    03:30 – Genetics vs. environment: the “what caused it?” conversation
    05:17 – Inclusive sailing + saying yes to opportunity
    07:28 – Mindset shift: openness, gratitude, and community
    11:20 – Nostalgia vs. fear of the future
    13:37 – “Any day on the water is a good day”
    15:48 – Ego, aging, and athletic decline
    18:18 – Process goals vs outcome goals
    22:28 – AFib update + training limitations
    23:10 – Career limbo + Parkinson’s and employment
    29:46 – Forced retirement vs choosing to walk away

    Follow / Connect:

    🔔 Subscribe: https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/
    📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/
    🌐 Website: https://www.ericvonfrohlich.com/podcast
    💼 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athlete-s-journey-podcast/?viewAsMember=true


    Disclaimer:

    Personal experience and education only, not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical decisions.

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    33 Min.
  • Treat the Athlete, Not the Diagnosis | Ellen Minzner
    Feb 11 2026

    Adaptive sport asks a simple question: what does the sport require, and how do you build the athlete to meet it. Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich sit down with Ellen Minzner, elite rowing coach and leader in adaptive and Paralympic sport, to discuss coaching athletes with disabilities through standards, structure, and respect. From Parkinson’s to para rowing to the Paralympic Games, the conversation centers on competition, training, and an athlete-first approach.

    Ellen shares why being treated like an athlete matters, how competition supports development, and why Parkinson’s presents unique challenges in training because it is progressive and unstable. Coaching decisions, sport demands, and measurable progress remain central throughout.

    What You’ll Learn:

    • Why adaptive athletes don’t want to be “coddled.” They want standards, structure, and the chance to improve.
    • How competition functions as a training tool, not just a finish line.
    • What makes Parkinson’s different from other disabilities in sport and why coaching has to adapt.
    • How elite coaches separate sport demands from limitations.
    • Why the Paralympics normalize disability in a way everyday life often doesn’t.


    Key Takeaways:

    ➡️ Treat the person like an athlete, not a diagnosis. Expectations matter, and so does respect.
    ➡️ Competition drives integration. Skills, nerves, fitness, and mindset have to show up together.
    ➡️ Adaptive sport requires precision. Progressive conditions like Parkinson’s require constant adjustment.
    ➡️ Improvement fuels motivation. Athletes need evidence they are getting better, not just “participating.”

    Key Moments:

    00:00 – Introduction to Ellen Minzner and her background in rowing and adaptive sport
    03:10 – Why the Paralympic Games are so powerful and surprisingly accessible as a fan experience
    06:45 – “The world is built for them.” Disability normalized at the Paralympics
    10:20 – What adaptive athletes actually want from coaches
    14:05 – Competition as a tool for growth, not just medals
    18:40 – The spectrum of disability in adaptive sport including congenital, acquired, and progressive
    23:15 – Parkinson’s as a non-stable condition and what that means for training
    27:30 – Defining sport demands versus limitations. What must be trained, adapted, or accepted
    31:10 – “They just want to be treated like an athlete”
    34:50 – Why hard work and visible improvement matter more than inspiration
    38:20 – The danger of lowering standards in adaptive sport
    42:00 – Closing thoughts on respect, effort, and doing meaningful work

    About the guest:

    Ellen Minzner is the Para High Performance Director at USRowing, where she leads the U.S. Para national team program. She was named the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee’s 2023 Paralympic Coach of the Year, and under her leadership, Team USA earned two silver medals at the 2023 World Rowing Championships and qualified boats for the 2024 Paralympic Games in Paris.

    A former elite athlete, Ellen is a two-time World Champion in the lightweight women’s pair (1995, 1996) and a Pan American Games gold medalist. She has also held leadership roles focused on inclusion and access in rowing, including work at Community Rowing, Inc.

    Connect with Ellen:

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ellenminzner/?hl=en
    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ellenminzner/

    About the hosts:

    Todd Vogt and Eric Von Frohlich are athletes living with Parkinson’s who share what they’re learning in real time: what’s working, what’s frustrating, and how to keep moving forward with an athlete’s mindset.

    Follow / connect:

    🎧 Subscribe: https://parkinsons-an-athletes-journey.transistor.fm/
    📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/parkinsonsathletepodcast/
    🌐 Website: https://www.ericvonfrohlich.com/podcast
    🤝 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/parkinsons-an-athletes-journey-podcast/?viewAsMember=true

    This podcast contains personal experience and education only, not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical decisions.

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    1 Std. und 6 Min.
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