EPISODE · Jul 1, 2026 · 43 MIN
Life Is Not a Sprint, It’s 100 Marathons | Larry Grogin
from Parkinson's: An Athlete's Journey · host Eric Von Frohlich and Todd Vogt
Larry Grogin is nearing the end of one of the most demanding endurance challenges imaginable: 100 marathons in 100 consecutive days.With only a few runs left, Eric catches up with Larry as he nears the end of a journey that has taken him more than 2,500 miles across the United States. What began as a challenge built around Parkinson’s, exercise, and possibility has become something more personal, more practical, and more revealing. Larry has learned what happens when the body hurts, the mind gets tired, the weather turns, and the road still has to be covered.In this conversation, Larry reflects on what the first 97 days have taught him about adaptation, support, medication, movement, and the mental tools that help him keep going. He talks about slow warm-ups, hard miles, music, nature, community, and the surprising strength that comes from doing the work day after day.Key Takeaways➡️ Hard days connect the easy days.Larry describes the rough stretches of the challenge as temporary, not permanent. Over 97 days, he learned that the bad miles, low-energy windows, and painful moments always shifted if he kept moving.➡️ Adaptation happens through repetition.The daily marathons forced Larry to respect slow warm-ups, listen to his body, and let his running improve through consistent use. By the end, he felt smoother, stronger, and more like a runner than when he started.➡️ Support made the challenge possible.Larry is clear that the run was not done alone. Sponsors, drivers, family, Parkinson’s groups, and strangers across the country helped carry the effort, reminding him that accepting help is part of endurance.➡️ The diagnosis is not the finish line.When speaking to newly diagnosed people, Larry’s message is direct: Parkinson’s changes things, but it does not mean life is over. Movement, community, and the willingness to try can still create a path forward.Key Moments00:31 Reconnecting with Larry Grogin near the end of 100 marathons in 100 days01:02 What the challenge taught him about pain, overuse, and time02:03 Tough days connect the easy days02:48 The 40% of dopamine-producing nerves still doing their job09:34 The support team behind the run10:31 Returning to the site of Larry’s first triathlon12:14 Medication consistency and changes during the challenge13:05 Why slow warm-ups became even more important14:22 Looking stronger at the end of each marathon15:32 Parkinson’s Warriors, Durango, and the power of community18:42 Learning to accept help21:45 Mental tools for hard miles: music, calls, nature, and birds25:25 The role of rhythm, music, and running cadence27:06 What Larry would tell someone newly diagnosed29:25 Running for people who think they cannot32:17 The people Larry met across the country37:19 What Larry would tell his 2019 self38:00 Learning that every downtime ends39:11 What an athlete’s mindset means after Parkinson’s41:41 “Larry is running for people who think they cannot, but they’ll try”Connect with Larry GroginStrides for Humanity / Run Larry Run: https://dpf.org/runlarryrunIG: @runlarryrun26Follow the journey: #RunLarryRunAbout the HostEric Von Frohlich is a fitness entrepreneur, coach, and athlete living with Parkinson's who founded EVF Performance and Row House before his diagnosis in 2020. On the podcast he talks with athletes, experts, and people refusing to let a diagnosis be the end of the story.Parkinson’s: An Athlete’s Journey📩 Join our Community: https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community🎧 Listen and Subscribe: Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey🎬 Watch on YouTube: @parkinsonsathletepodcast📸 Instagram: @parkinsonsathletepodcast🤝 LinkedIn: Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey🌐 Website: www.evfmethod.comDisclaimerThis podcast shares personal experience and general education, not medical advice. Always talk with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to medication, treatment, or exercise.
What this episode covers
Larry Grogin is nearing the end of one of the most demanding endurance challenges imaginable: 100 marathons in 100 consecutive days.With only a few runs left, Eric catches up with Larry as he nears the end of a journey that has taken him more than 2,500 miles across the United States. What began as a challenge built around Parkinson’s, exercise, and possibility has become something more personal, more practical, and more revealing. Larry has learned what happens when the body hurts, the mind gets tired, the weather turns, and the road still has to be covered.In this conversation, Larry reflects on what the first 97 days have taught him about adaptation, support, medication, movement, and the mental tools that help him keep going. He talks about slow warm-ups, hard miles, music, nature, community, and the surprising strength that comes from doing the work day after day.Key Takeaways➡️ Hard days connect the easy days.Larry describes the rough stretches of the challenge as temporary, not permanent. Over 97 days, he learned that the bad miles, low-energy windows, and painful moments always shifted if he kept moving.➡️ Adaptation happens through repetition.The daily marathons forced Larry to respect slow warm-ups, listen to his body, and let his running improve through consistent use. By the end, he felt smoother, stronger, and more like a runner than when he started.➡️ Support made the challenge possible.Larry is clear that the run was not done alone. Sponsors, drivers, family, Parkinson’s groups, and strangers across the country helped carry the effort, reminding him that accepting help is part of endurance.➡️ The diagnosis is not the finish line.When speaking to newly diagnosed people, Larry’s message is direct: Parkinson’s changes things, but it does not mean life is over. Movement, community, and the willingness to try can still create a path forward.Key Moments00:31 Reconnecting with Larry Grogin near the end of 100 marathons in 100 days01:02 What the challenge taught him about pain, overuse, and time02:03 Tough days connect the easy days02:48 The 40% of dopamine-producing nerves still doing their job09:34 The support team behind the run10:31 Returning to the site of Larry’s first triathlon12:14 Medication consistency and changes during the challenge13:05 Why slow warm-ups became even more important14:22 Looking stronger at the end of each marathon15:32 Parkinson’s Warriors, Durango, and the power of community18:42 Learning to accept help21:45 Mental tools for hard miles: music, calls, nature, and birds25:25 The role of rhythm, music, and running cadence27:06 What Larry would tell someone newly diagnosed29:25 Running for people who think they cannot32:17 The people Larry met across the country37:19 What Larry would tell his 2019 self38:00 Learning that every downtime ends39:11 What an athlete’s mindset means after Parkinson’s41:41 “Larry is running for people who think they cannot, but they’ll try”Connect with Larry GroginStrides for Humanity / Run Larry Run: https://dpf.org/runlarryrunIG: @runlarryrun26Follow the journey: #RunLarryRunAbout the HostEric Von Frohlich is a fitness entrepreneur, coach, and athlete living with Parkinson's who founded EVF Performance and Row House before his diagnosis in 2020. On the podcast he talks with athletes, experts, and people refusing to let a diagnosis be the end of the story.Parkinson’s: An Athlete’s Journey📩 Join our Community: https://evfmethod.com/subscribe-to-podcast-community🎧 Listen and Subscribe: Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey🎬 Watch on YouTube: @parkinsonsathletepodcast📸 Instagram: @parkinsonsathletepodcast🤝 LinkedIn: Parkinson's An Athlete's Journey🌐 Website: www.evfmethod.comDisclaimerThis podcast shares personal experience and general education, not medical advice. Always talk with a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to medication, treatment, or exercise.
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Life Is Not a Sprint, It’s 100 Marathons | Larry Grogin
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