7 Discipline Lessons from the Pax8 Podcast Series You Can Apply to Life
At Pax8 Beyond 2025, I recorded 24 podcast conversations with leaders from across tech, security, wellness, and business. But what stood out wasn’t just the software or strategies — it was the discipline behind their success. These weren’t just executives and innovators; they were surfers, chefs, martial artists, parents, and coaches who bring intentionality into every area of their lives.
If you’re working on self-improvement in health, fitness, business, or mindset, here are 7 lessons from the podcast series that hit home:
1. Discipline Can Save Your Life
After a doctor told me I might not live to see my daughter graduate, I lost 120 pounds. I shared this story with Ken Tripp (Netwrix), who emphasized that discipline and family routines are the backbone of everything he does. For Ken, the shift wasn’t just about business growth — it was about survival, presence, and legacy.
Discipline begins with a reason. When your reason becomes urgent, your routine follows.
2. Your Hobby Can Sharpen Your Mindset
Gene Kim (Absolute) finds focus in surfing. He tracks every wave and applies the same clarity to work and leadership. The ocean, like business, is unpredictable — but if you study the patterns and stay grounded, you can ride it with confidence.
This insight reminds us that hobbies aren’t distractions — they’re training grounds. They build muscle memory for resilience.
3. Martial Arts Build More Than Muscle
Ryan Ettridge (CyberCert) spoke openly about burnout and how martial arts gave him a mental reset. He’s now creating an AI-driven executive coaching platform — powered by that same internal strength. What you practice in the dojo shows up in the boardroom.
Martial arts — like life — demand discipline in the face of discomfort. And that’s where transformation happens.
4. Knife Skills Are Life Skills
Chef-turned-security-leader Tanya Alfonso shared how mise en place (French for “everything in its place”) helped her lead a tech company under pressure. Prep your day like you prep a kitchen: intentional, clean, and ready to move.
Good cooking requires planning, order, and care. So does effective leadership.
5. Routine Builds Confidence
From jiu-jitsu to coaching youth baseball, guests like Aaron Peterik and Christopher Marquez echoed a truth: consistency creates confidence. Whether it’s kids or clients, showing up with routine builds trust.
Great performers don’t rise to the occasion — they fall back on their preparation.
6. AI or Not, You Still Need Intention
Many guests talked about AI, but the real focus was intentionality. Technology can amplify discipline, but it can’t replace it. If you feed it chaos, it produces chaos faster. But if you lead it with clarity, it becomes a powerful ally.
Whether you’re using AI to write, train, or analyze — the tool only works as well as your mindset.
7. Discipline Isn’t Just for Business
This wasn’t a tech series. It was a human one. The themes that surfaced — focus, routine, clarity, commitment — are the same ingredients required for:
- Losing weight
- Practicing martial arts
- Cooking with purpose
- Leading teams
- Building anything that lasts
Across every discipline, the principles remain the same: start with intention, stick with it, and adapt as you go.
The Bottom Line: Discipline is the throughline in high performance, whether you’re rolling in jiu-jitsu, securing a network, leading a family, or writing a novel. If you’re looking to improve any area of your life — fitness, focus, fulfillment, or leadership — you’ll find inspiration in these stories.

