Ageless Athlete — How to Stay Strong, Curious & Capable for Life podcast

How to Achieve Hard Goals — Doing What Nobody Had Done Before | Amy Gubser, 56

0:00
1:30:31
Rewind 15 seconds
Fast Forward 15 seconds

Amy Appelhans Gubsers (56) is a nurse at UCSF, a mom and grandma, and the first person to swim from the Golden Gate Bridge to the Farallon Islands—nearly 30 miles and roughly 17 hours in cold Pacific water, in what many consider shark territory. 

This is more than an epic swim. It’s a practical conversation about how big goals actually get done: patience over years, calm under pressure, and the ability to keep moving when conditions stop cooperating.

In this episode:

  •  The long-game reality behind “overnight” achievements 
  •  The mental skill that mattered most during 17 hours 
  •  Cold-water decision-making + staying calm 
  •  Sharks: real risk, smart planning 
  •  Why goals like this are never truly solo 

Takeaway: Massive goals aren’t won by hype. They’re earned through durable process. 

From the vault: recorded + released ~1.5 years ago — still one of our clearest blueprints for pursuing a massive goal with real stakes.

🎥 Longevity insights + behind-the-scenes.
Ageless Athlete on Substack - 1-2x / month. No spam.

🎥 Want the full experience?
YouTube — full-length video. free.

📍More clips + behind-the-scenes
Ageless Athlete on Instagram - follow along.

🚀 Love the show? Here’s how to support it 

If something you’ve heard here has stayed with you, made you smile, or helped you keep going, I’d be honored if you’d consider supporting the show. 👉 https://buymeacoffee.com/agelessathlete

Topics: longevity, fitness over 40, endurance training, aging athletes, recovery, injury prevention

More episodes from "Ageless Athlete — How to Stay Strong, Curious & Capable for Life"