In this episode, I sit down with Terrence Ogden, founder of Official Project Grit — a man who transformed a life of addiction, jail time, and rock bottom into one of the most inspiring stories of resilience, grit, and faith you'll ever hear.
We start with the Immortal 32 Ruck — a 75-mile road march from Gonzales, Texas to the Alamo, now in its seventh year, inspired by the 32 men who answered the call at the Alamo knowing it was a one-way ticket. But what makes Terrence's story so gripping is where he came from. Years as a severe heroin addict, cycling in and out of jail, until a mentor named Kenny Baker reached out a hand and changed everything. That spirit of one man helping another became the DNA of Project Grit.
We also get into Terrence's most extraordinary feat: a solo, self-supported 1,046-mile ruck across the entire state of Texas — 40 days, no crew, with food caches buried in the desert weeks in advance. He shares what it taught him about faith, discipline, and a peace found not in the absence of chaos, but in the presence of God within it.
We close with a powerful call to any man carrying something heavy in silence. Terrence's message is simple: we are tribal by nature, and you will never find your true purpose until you're willing to ask another man for help.
Timeline Summary
[0:00] Introduction to the Dad Edge mission and the movement to raise leaders of families and communities
[1:01] Introducing Terrence Ogden — founder of Official Project Grit and one of the toughest non-veterans you'll ever meet
[1:46] The Immortal 32 Ruck: a 75-mile road march from Gonzales to the Alamo held every year around Texas Independence Day
[4:18] Terrence recaps the seventh annual event — 51 starters, 35 finishers, record-breaking heat in Texas
[7:32] How Official Project Grit was born — and why it starts with Terrence's story of addiction and redemption
[8:19] The mentor who changed everything: Kenny Baker, the man who pulled Terrence out of the gutter
[10:32] The Soul Crusher: the defining moment at mile 40 that gave birth to Project Grit's true mission
[13:25] Ad break — Roommates to Soulmates Cohort preview call
[15:11] Rucking as an equalizer: how a knee injury transitioned Terrence from ultramarathons to rucking
[20:28] The power of reaching out — Larry's personal story of texting a friend in a dark moment
[23:06] Six years sober and on the edge: Terrence's most gripping near-relapse story and the friend who saved him
[28:15] The battle cry — a message for any man who is lone-wolfing it right now
[30:04] Discipline before confidence: Terrence's leadership philosophy and how he's raising his kids
[32:49] The 1,046-mile Texas ruck: 40 days, solo, self-supported, food caches buried in the desert
[39:10] Finding peace in the desert — and why peace isn't the absence of chaos but the presence of God
[41:54] The spiritual parallels to 40 days in the desert — temptation, faith, and miraculous provision
[48:07] What's next: the Gritty 50 event, a book, and an upcoming documentary
[50:37] Final words for the man in the dark — why reaching out to a brother changes everything
Five Key Takeaways
Links & Resources
Closing
If there's one message from this episode that stands out, it's this: no man was meant to carry his heaviest load alone.
Terrence Ogden went from a heroin addict cycling in and out of jail to rucking 1,046 miles solo across the state of Texas — not because he was born tough, but because one man reached out a hand when he was at rock bottom. And Terrence paid that forward.
Whether you're in a season of darkness right now, or you know someone who is — this episode is a reminder that the bravest thing a man can do is pick up the phone and say, "I need help."
If this conversation moved you, share it with a man in your life who needs to hear it.
Go out and live legendary.