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Finding Me with Josh Wolf

Author: Josh Wolf

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FINDING ME with Josh Wolf 


What happens when a comedian stops trying to be “on” — and just tells the truth? Comedian JOSH WOLF steps out of his comfort zone to do a daily audio-video journal that leads you to the most important part of you. Authenticity.


FINDING ME with Josh Wolf  is a daily, no-filter audio-video journal about holding yourself accountable and become the best version of yourself. 


Every day, Josh opens the mic and talks honestly about where he showed up, where he fell short,  and what he’s still trying to figure out: 


• parenting wins and failures 


• marriage highs and lows 


• health, discipline, and the days he loses that battle 


• creative risks, bad ideas, and quiet victories


• money stress, family drama, old fears that won’t leave 


• the dog, because of course the dog 


It isn’t polished.  


It isn’t curated.  


And it definitely isn’t “self-help.” 


But every day, it’s honest. 


Because accountability isn’t a speech — it’s a habit. 


Josh isn’t your guru. He isn’t your therapist. He’s a flawed human documenting his personal journey to accountability and authenticity… and he’s inviting you to walk alongside him. 




Some days you’ll laugh harder than you expect.  


Some days you’ll feel seen in a way that sneaks up on you.  


Some days, it may hurt — in the best possible way. 


Because being human is messy. 


And instead of pretending he has it all together, Josh is choosing to document the mess — in real  time — and hold himself publicly accountable. 


No filters.  


No skipped days.  


No pretending anyone has the answers. 


If you’ve ever wondered whether everyone else is secretly struggling too… They are. 


And here, nobody has to hide it. 


We’re figuring this out together. 


FINDING ME with Josh Wolf.

196 Episodes
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At a Crossroads...

At a Crossroads...

2026-02-1716:58

Finding Me with Josh Wolf Today’s episode is a big one. Josh gets honest about something that’s been building quietly beneath the surface — the feeling that a major change may be coming in his life. He’s not walking away from comedy. Not even close. But after years on the road, years of chasing the next show, the next opportunity, the next stage… he’s starting to ask a bigger question: What if the next chapter looks different? There’s no clear plan yet. No dramatic announcement. No sudden pivot. Just a feeling. The kind of feeling that starts as a whisper — a sense that something in your life needs attention, even if you don’t yet know what that attention should look like. And that’s the moment Josh explores today. Because real change doesn’t begin with a decision. It begins with awareness. With the courage to say out loud: Something is shifting. Something matters here. I need to listen to it. That’s the heart of Finding Me. Not having all the answers. Not reinventing your life overnight. Just being honest enough to notice when something inside you is asking to be heard. If you’ve ever felt that quiet restlessness… that sense that a new version of your life might be forming, even if you can’t see it yet… this episode is for you. 🎧 Call to Action If today’s episode resonated with you: ⭐ Follow and subscribe so you don’t miss a daily check-in 📝 Leave a review or comment — Josh reads them 📲 Share this episode with someone who might be standing at the edge of their own next chapter 🎙️ And remember: growth doesn’t start with certainty — it starts with the courage to admit something in your life is asking to change. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Finding Me with Josh Wolf – Episode 31 Today, Josh talks about a realization that hits harder than any motivational speech: At some point, you have to stop telling yourself you’re trying your best… when you know you’re only taking half-court shots. In this episode, Josh gets honest about the difference between effort and real commitment. The comfortable kind of trying. The kind where you leave yourself an out. Where you protect your ego by never fully going all in. Because if you don’t give it everything, you never have to face the question: What if I still fail? Josh shares what it means to finally bet on himself — to stop playing it safe, stop hedging, and start showing up with full effort and full accountability. Then the story shifts from mindset to pure chaos. Josh recounts his recent trip to Mardi Gras, where he went to visit his wife while she was deep in the madness of directing a film. Between the crowds, the energy, the unpredictability, and the controlled insanity of both filmmaking and New Orleans during Carnival, the trip became its own kind of reminder: Life rarely waits until you feel ready. Sometimes you just show up, lean in, and figure it out as you go. This episode is about commitment, risk, and the moment you stop pretending you’re trying — and actually do it. 🎧 Call to ActionIf today’s episode resonated with you:⭐ Follow and subscribe so you don’t miss a daily check-in📝 Leave a review or comment — Josh reads them📲 Share this episode with someone who might be having “one of those days”🎙️ And remember: you don’t find out what’s possible until you stop holding something back. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Little White Lies

Little White Lies

2026-02-1320:14

Finding Me with Josh Wolf Today, Josh gets honest about something small… that isn’t so small. He talks about his habit of telling what he calls “little white lies.” Not the harmful kind. Not the life-changing kind. Just the subtle exaggerations — the extra detail, the slightly better version of a story, the tweak that makes a moment land a little stronger. It’s a comedian’s instinct. A storyteller’s reflex. And on stage? That’s the job. But offstage, Josh is realizing something important: if the goal of this show is honesty, growth, and showing up as your real self, then the small embellishments have to go too. Because authenticity isn’t just about the big truths. It’s about the little ones. This episode is about awareness, accountability, and the quiet discipline of choosing honesty — even when the unpolished version isn’t quite as entertaining. It’s a new goal. A simple one. And a worthy one. Plus, Josh opens the inbox and responds to more listener emails — real questions, real struggles, and the kind of connection that reminds us none of us are figuring this out alone. Because finding yourself doesn’t happen through a better story. It happens through the real one. 🎧 Call to Action If today’s episode resonated with you: ⭐ Follow and subscribe so you don’t miss a daily check-in 📝 Leave a review or comment — Josh reads them 📲 Share this episode with someone who might be having “one of those days” 🎙️ And remember: progress starts the moment you choose the truth — even in the small things. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Finding Me with Josh Wolf – Episode 29 Today starts on a high note. Josh is back in the gym. The body is moving again. The list is getting shorter. Momentum is back. And with it comes something simple but powerful: gratitude. Because some days you feel stuck. And some days you remember what forward motion feels like. This is one of those days. But then, Josh takes a turn into what he calls the Hollywood Time Machine — and the mood shifts. He shares a story from early in his career, one that’s uncomfortable, familiar, and unfortunately not uncommon in the entertainment industry. An audition that wasn’t really an audition. A casting meeting that crossed the line. The kind of moment where the power dynamic becomes clear, the couch gets a little too small, and the question isn’t about talent anymore — it’s about how badly you want the job. Josh knew the answer. And the bottom line? He didn’t get the part. What follows is an honest reflection on boundaries, power, and the quiet reality behind stories that many people in the business — and many outside of it — know all too well. Today’s episode is about momentum, self-respect, and the importance of knowing when walking away is the real win. Because success isn’t just about what you get. Sometimes it’s about what you refuse to trade for it. 🎧 Call to Action If today’s episode resonated with you: ⭐ Follow and subscribe so you don’t miss a daily check-in 📝 Leave a review or comment — Josh reads them 📲 Share this episode with someone who might be having “one of those days” 🎙️ And remember: showing up honestly is progress, even when the day isn’t a lot of fun. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
My Vices...

My Vices...

2026-02-1115:54

Finding Me with Josh Wolf – Episode 28 Today, Josh gets honest about something many of us experience but don’t always connect to our daily routines — the restlessness, irritability, and old habits that start creeping in when we’re not taking care of ourselves physically. For Josh, the warning sign is clear: when he’s not getting to the gym regularly, things start to bubble to the surface. The energy builds. The mind gets louder. The edge comes back. And that’s the heart of this episode. Movement isn’t about chasing a certain look. It’s about regulation. Physical activity gets the blood moving, the muscles firing, and the joints lubricated — but even more important, it stabilizes your mood, lowers stress, and protects your mental health. The takeaway is simple: If you can’t lift, do something else. Ride a bike. Go for a run. Take a walk. Just move. Because when your body moves, your mind gets the reset it needs. This episode is a reminder that mental health isn’t only about what’s happening in your head — sometimes the best way forward starts by getting out of it and into motion. 🎧 Call to Action If today’s episode resonated with you: ⭐ Follow and subscribe so you don’t miss a daily check-in 📝 Leave a review or comment — Josh reads them 📲 Share this episode with someone who might be having “one of those days” 🎙️ And remember: showing up honestly is progress, even when the day isn’t a lot of fun. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Leave the Kids Alone

Leave the Kids Alone

2026-02-1017:40

Finding Me with Josh Wolf Today’s episode is about perspective, responsibility, and the kind of empathy that feels in short supply. Josh starts with a conversation about inclusivity and the reaction to the Super Bowl halftime show — not to critique the performance itself, but to talk about the bigger picture. How quickly adults turn cultural moments into battlegrounds. How everything becomes outrage. And why maybe it’s time for all of us to take a breath, act like grown-ups… and leave the kids out of it. Because not everything needs to be a fight. And not every moment needs to become a culture war. Then the conversation shifts to something far more serious. While traveling through parts of the American Southwest, Josh witnessed firsthand the devastating impact of the fentanyl epidemic. What he saw wasn’t headlines or statistics — it was the human toll. Struggling communities. Overwhelmed families. Lives unraveling in real time. The short version? It’s bad. Really bad. This episode is a reminder that while we argue about entertainment and internet drama, there are real crises happening all around us — and they deserve our attention, our compassion, and our willingness to look beyond the noise. Because sometimes, finding perspective… is part of finding ourselves. 🎧 Call to Action If today’s episode resonated with you: ⭐ Follow and subscribe so you don’t miss a daily check-in 📝 Leave a review or comment — Josh reads them 📲 Share this episode with someone who might be having “one of those days” 🎙️ And remember: showing up honestly is progress, even when the day isn’t a lot of fun. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
One Of "Those" Days...

One Of "Those" Days...

2026-02-0910:27

🎙️ Finding Me with Josh Wolf — Episode 26 Some days just feel… off. In today’s episode, Josh Wolf checks in from one of those days — the kind where nothing catastrophic has happened, but everything feels heavier than it should. An injury has sidelined his workouts, disrupting a routine that normally keeps him grounded. Without that physical outlet, Josh talks honestly about how quickly his mental balance starts to shift. For him — and for a lot of us — movement isn’t just about fitness. It’s structure. It’s stress relief. It’s emotional maintenance. Take that away, and the day can start to wobble. Layer on top of that the emotional weight of recent political events, the nonstop news cycle, and the background noise of uncertainty, and suddenly the mood turns from unsettled to overwhelming. And that’s the heart of this episode. Josh doesn’t try to fix the day. He doesn’t force a silver lining. Instead, he does something more useful — he says it out loud. This is one of those days. Because the truth is, we all have them. Days when motivation is low. When anxiety is high. When the world feels louder than usual and our coping tools don’t seem to work the way they normally do. The point of Finding Me has never been perfection. It’s awareness. Josh reminds us that our feelings matter — even when they’re uncomfortable. Especially when they’re uncomfortable. Ignoring them doesn’t make them disappear. Naming them, acknowledging them, and giving ourselves permission to feel them is often the first step toward getting back to center. It’s not the happiest episode. But it might be one of the most honest. And sometimes honesty is exactly what we need to hear. 🎧 Call to Action If today’s episode resonated with you: ⭐ Follow and subscribe so you don’t miss a daily check-in 📝 Leave a review or comment — Josh reads them 📲 Share this episode with someone who might be having “one of those days” 🎙️ And remember: showing up honestly is progress, even when the day isn’t a lot of fun. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
COMMENTS!!!!

COMMENTS!!!!

2026-02-0629:54

🎙️ Finding Me with Josh Wolf — Episode 25 The week closes on a note of gratitude — deep, steady, and unmistakably real. In today’s episode, Josh Wolf opens up about how profoundly lucky he feels to be spending meaningful time with his adult son, Jacob. Not rushed time. Not obligatory time. Real time. Conversations. Laughter. Shared moments on the road and in between the noise of life. Josh talks about that rare gift — getting to know your child not just as a parent, but as another adult — and the kind of gratitude that doesn’t come from achievement or success, but from presence. It’s unfiltered. It’s tender. And it’s clear this isn’t something he takes lightly for even a second. From there, the episode turns outward. Josh dedicates the rest of the show to reading and responding to listener comments that have come in throughout the week. Messages about insecurity. About fear. About showing up honestly when it would be easier to hide. Josh doesn’t rush through them or play it for laughs. He listens. He reflects. He responds with the same openness he’s been asking of himself. It’s one of those episodes where the line between host and audience disappears — where Finding Me becomes exactly what it claims to be: a shared process, unfolding in real time. There’s no big lesson wrapped in a bow. No forced resolution. Just gratitude, connection, and the quiet power of being heard. It’s a strong way to end the week. And exactly what we’ve come to expect from Finding Me. 🎧 Call to Action If this episode resonated with you: ⭐ Follow and subscribe so you don’t miss a daily check-in 📝 Leave a review or comment — Josh really does read them 📲 Share this episode with someone who values honest connection 🎙️ And keep showing up… one day, one conversation at a time Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
🎙️ Finding Me with Josh Wolf — Episode 24 Today’s check-in with Josh Wolf starts with bloodwork… and ends with a baseball cap coming off. Josh opens up about recent lab results showing elevated cholesterol and how that pushed him to change his diet. But this isn’t a preachy wellness episode. In fact, it’s the opposite. Josh talks about how easy it is to get overwhelmed by health “rules” online and why what works for one person might be totally wrong for someone else. Bodies are different. Metabolisms are different. Histories are different. His big takeaway? Stop chasing trends and start paying attention to your data, your doctor, and your reality. It’s practical, grounded, and refreshingly free of influencer magic formulas. But that’s only half the story. Because this is also Day Two of Josh facing his biggest insecurities — and today he lets go of his most reliable security blanket: his baseball hat. What follows is one of the most vulnerable conversations he’s ever shared on the show. Josh talks openly about the fear of losing his hair — a fear that hits deeper than vanity. It’s about identity. Aging. Control. How we see ourselves versus how we think the world sees us. And he’s quick to point out that this isn’t just a “guy thing.” Hair loss and body changes hit men and women alike, and the emotional weight is very real. There’s humor (because it’s Josh), but there’s no hiding here. Taking off the hat becomes symbolic — a small, physical act that represents something much bigger: choosing honesty over armor. This episode is about health, yes. But more than that, it’s about self-acceptance in the face of change. About learning to adapt without shame. About realizing that vulnerability doesn’t make you weaker — it makes you more human. And maybe, just maybe, a little more free. 🎧 Call to Action If this episode resonated with you: ⭐ Follow and subscribe so you don’t miss a daily check-in 📝 Leave a review — it helps others find the show 📲 Share this episode with someone navigating change in their own life 🎙️ And keep showing up for yourself… one honest day at a time Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
🎙️ Finding Me with Josh Wolf — Episode 23 Another day, another honest check-in with Josh Wolf, and this one hits right in the vulnerable center — with a side of classic Josh frustration. This week, Josh dives deeper into his insecurities and shares a moment from therapy that stopped him in his tracks. His therapist told him he needs to picture and hug “Little Josh” — the younger version of himself who still carries old fears, old doubts, and the lingering need for approval. Instead of pushing those feelings away, Josh talks about learning to comfort that younger version, to reassure him that everything really will be okay. It’s tender. It’s uncomfortable. It’s deeply human. And because it’s Josh, it’s also hilarious in the most relatable ways. He vents about two of life’s greatest modern irritations: spam calls that somehow always know the worst possible time to ring… and the universal rage of stepping in dog poop. Yes, this episode moves fluidly from emotional healing to muttering “ARE YOU KIDDING ME?” while scraping your shoe on a curb. But even those rants tie back to the bigger theme: we’re all just trying to get through the day with a little more patience, a little more self-compassion, and maybe slightly cleaner sneakers. Josh reminds us that growth isn’t about becoming someone new. It’s about learning to take care of the person you’ve always been — especially the parts that felt scared, overlooked, or unsure. So hug your inner kid. Ignore the spam calls. And please, for the love of humanity… pick up after your dog. 🎧 Call to Action If this episode made you laugh, think, or call your therapist: ⭐ Follow and subscribe so you never miss a daily check-in 📝 Leave a review — it helps more people find the show 📲 Share this episode with someone who could use a reminder to be kinder to themselves 🎙️ And keep showing up… one honest day at a time Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
🎙️ Finding Me with Josh Wolf — Episode 22 Another day, another honest step forward with Josh Wolf. This week kicks off a deeply personal run of episodes as Josh begins unpacking some of his biggest insecurities — starting with the one that hits closest to home: the fear of not being accepted by his peers in the comedy world. For someone whose job is literally to make people laugh, this vulnerability cuts deep. Josh talks openly about what it feels like to wonder where you fit in, to question whether you’re respected by the people you admire, and how easy it is — even after years of success — to feel like an outsider looking in. It’s raw. It’s honest. And it’s Josh at his most open. Of course, because this is Josh, the episode isn’t all heavy. There’s also a moment involving a guy at the gym, an ill-timed fart, and the universal human struggle of pretending nothing just happened. Because vulnerability and bodily functions can, in fact, coexist. But beneath the laughs, this episode is really about something bigger: the courage it takes to admit what scares you, to say the quiet thoughts out loud, and to stop pretending you’re immune to self-doubt. Josh shows that strength doesn’t come from having it all figured out — it comes from being willing to be seen while you’re still working on it. If you’ve ever worried about belonging… about being enough… about whether the room actually wants you there — this one’s going to hit home. 🎧 Call to Action If this episode resonated: ⭐ Follow and subscribe so you don’t miss a daily check-in 📝 Leave a review — it helps more people find the show 📲 Share this episode with someone who could use a reminder they’re not alone 🎙️ And keep showing up for yourself… one honest day at a time Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Finding Me with Josh Wolf This week, Josh Wolf dives into a truth that took him years (and a lot of life) to understand: It’s better to be hated for who you are than loved for who you’re not. Josh opens up about the strange freedom that comes with full authenticity — when you stop shape-shifting to fit rooms, crowds, expectations, or old versions of yourself. Not everyone will vibe with you… and that’s kind of the point. He shares stories from a recent private show in Kentucky that went great — even though only about half the room was truly locked into his act. Instead of spiraling about the ones who didn’t laugh, Josh talks about why focusing on the people who do connect is the only sane (and sustainable) way to create. But the heart of this episode? Fatherhood on the road. Josh reflects with deep gratitude on getting to travel and perform while spending real, meaningful time with his son Jacob. From car rides to backstage hangs, he talks about how these shared experiences are becoming the memories that matter most — and how success feels different when you get to share it with your kid. It’s funny. It’s grounded. It’s a little vulnerable. And it’s a reminder that being fully yourself might cost you approval… but it pays you back in peace. 🔥 Topics in This Episode     •    Why authenticity scares people (and why that’s okay)     •    Performing for a divided crowd — and not taking it personally     •    The difference between approval and connection     •    Gratitude, fatherhood, and life on the road     •    Letting go of who you think you “should” be 🎧 Call to Action If this episode hit home: ⭐ Follow & Subscribe so you never miss an episode 📝 Leave a review — it helps more than you think 📲 Share this episode with someone who needs permission to be themselves 🎥 Check out clips and updates on social 🎙️ And keep finding your own way… one honest step at a time Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Nervous is a Good Sign

Nervous is a Good Sign

2026-01-3011:49

Finding Me with Josh Wolf Episode 20: “Nervous Is a Good Sign” Josh is on the road and walking straight into one of every comedian’s quiet nightmares… a private party gig. You know the kind. Maybe they’re fans. Maybe they’re not. Maybe they want comedy. Maybe they just want the bar open and someone in the corner making noise. The vibe is unknown, the expectations are unclear, and the room did not buy tickets to see you. But here’s the twist — Josh wasn’t even booked primarily as a comedian. He was booked as a musician. And suddenly, for the first time in a while, he feels nervous again. In this episode, Josh talks about that feeling — the butterflies, the second-guessing, the “why did I say yes to this?” spiral — and why it might actually be one of the best signs you can have. Nervous means you care. Nervous means you’re stepping outside the routine. Nervous means you’re trying something that might not work… and choosing to do it anyway. We hear a lot of phrases about growth: take chances, embrace failure, get uncomfortable. They’re everywhere. They’re almost clichés at this point. But they became clichés for a reason. Because they’re true. Josh reflects on how easy it is to forget that once you find a groove, once life feels manageable, once you know how to play the room. Comfort is sneaky. It feels safe… until you realize you’ve stopped stretching. This episode is about saying yes when your instinct says hide. About chasing growth even when it’s awkward. About remembering that the moments that scare you a little are often the ones that move you forward the most. Josh admits he forgets this all the time. Do you? Connect with Finding Me If this episode hit home, make sure you’re following Finding Me with Josh Wolf so you never miss a conversation. ⭐️ Leave a rating and review — it helps more people find the show 📲 Share this episode with someone who’s standing on the edge of something new 💬 Join the conversation on social and tell Josh the last time you did something that scared you (in a good way) Growth doesn’t usually feel comfortable. That’s how you know it’s working. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Finding Me with Josh Wolf Episode 19: “Small Goals, Big Results” Josh is back and getting real about something a lot of us struggle with — health, weight, and the long road back when you realize you’ve drifted further than you meant to. In this episode, he opens up about the many diets he’s tried over the years, the frustration of starting over (again), and the mental game that can be even tougher than the physical one. He talks about a turning point from years ago, when a close friend said something honest — and uncomfortable — about his weight gain. Not to shame him, but because real friends don’t pretend everything’s fine when you’re not at your best. Sometimes love shows up as accountability. Josh also shares how he stopped chasing dramatic, overnight transformations and started focusing on small, achievable goals instead. A little progress. A little consistency. A few small wins that slowly built the confidence he needed to keep going — even when the scale didn’t move as fast as he wanted. This episode is about patience, perspective, and the power of stacking small victories when big results feel far away. Because lasting change rarely comes from one giant leap… It comes from showing up, over and over again. Connect with Finding Me If this episode resonated with you, make sure you’re following Finding Me with Josh Wolf so you never miss a conversation. ⭐️ Leave a rating and review — it helps more people find the show 📲 Share this episode with someone who could use a little motivation right now 💬 Join the conversation on social and let Josh know what small goal you’re working on Finding yourself isn’t about being perfect — it’s about moving forward, one step at a time. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Finding Me with Josh Wolf Episode 18: “They Want Us To Argue With Each Other” In this episode, Josh takes a step back from the noise and looks at the bigger picture behind today’s nonstop outrage cycle. Why does it feel like everyone is fighting all the time? Why does every issue instantly turn into a war in the comments? And who actually benefits from all of us being constantly at each other’s throats? Josh shares his perspective on how division has become a feature — not a bug — of modern life. From algorithm-driven social media feeds that keep us trapped in echo chambers, to the way outrage is monetized and amplified, he explores how we’re being nudged away from real conversation and pushed toward endless, exhausting conflict. He also gets personal about something freeing he’s realized: he no longer feels the need to win arguments with strangers online. In a world where everyone has a microphone and no one is really listening, choosing where to put your energy might be the most radical move of all. This episode is less about politics — and more about awareness, attention, and refusing to let your peace be hijacked by people you’ve never met. Because maybe the real power move… is not playing the game at all. Connect with Finding Me If this episode resonated with you, make sure you’re following Finding Me with Josh Wolf so you never miss a conversation. ⭐️ Leave a rating and review — it helps more people find the show 📲 Share this episode with someone who’s tired of the noise too 💬 Join the conversation on social and let Josh know your thoughts Sometimes the most meaningful debates aren’t in the comments… they’re the ones we have with ourselves. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
🎧 Finding Me — Episode 17 When Policy Turns Deadly Josh can’t stay quiet about what’s unfolding in Minnesota. What started as a debate over immigration enforcement has escalated into something far more disturbing — and it forces a line we should all be able to agree on. Disagreements over policy are part of democracy. But there can be no disagreement about murder. This episode confronts the fear, anger, and confusion surrounding armed, masked federal agents operating in American communities and the deadly consequences that have followed. Josh asks the hard question: When enforcement starts to feel like warfare, what happens to the people caught in between? 🧠 This Episode Explores     •    The growing tension between federal authority and local communities     •    Conflicting narratives about the use of force     •    Why accountability matters — no matter who holds the badge     •    The moral line between policy enforcement and loss of life 🗣️ From the Episode “Disagreements on policy are healthy — but there can be no disagreement on murder.” “Armed, masked, untrained soldiers in the streets of America killing our citizens is not okay.” 🎙️ Why This Conversation Matters This isn’t about left vs. right. It’s about whether we still share a basic belief: human life must come before politics. Josh challenges listeners to think about power, responsibility, and what kind of country we want to be when fear and force enter the picture. ✅ Follow + Connect 📲 Instagram & TikTok: @findingmewithjoshwolf 🐦 X: @findingmepod 📘 Facebook: Finding Me with Josh Wolf ▶️ YouTube: @findingmewithjoshwolf 📩 Email: findingmewithjoshwolf@gmail.com ⭐️ Enjoying the show? Leave a 5-star rating + review — it helps more people find Finding Me. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Finding Me with Josh Wolf — Episode 16 Some Issues Don't Have "Two Sides" This week on Finding Me, Josh steps into deeper water. He talks about one of the biggest problems facing the country right now: the idea that every issue must have two equally valid sides. The pressure to “hear both perspectives.” The cultural reflex to treat every argument like a debate stage. Josh isn’t buying it. Because some things aren’t political. Some things aren’t philosophical. Some things aren’t “complicated.” Some things are just wrong. He makes the case that while nuance is important, we’ve drifted into a dangerous place where even basic moral lines get blurred by spin, tribalism, and the fear of offending someone’s viewpoint. Josh gets real about where that leads — to confusion, moral exhaustion, and a society that struggles to call out obvious harm for what it is. This isn’t a screaming rant. It’s a grounded, honest conversation about values, accountability, and the difference between healthy disagreement and moral relativism. And yes — it’s still Josh. There’s humor. There’s self-awareness. But there’s also clarity. Because growth isn’t just about self-improvement… sometimes it’s about saying, calmly and confidently: No. That’s not okay. In this episode:     •    Why not every issue deserves a “both sides” debate     •    The difference between nuance and moral confusion     •    How political spin can distort basic right and wrong     •    Why clarity doesn’t make you extreme — it makes you grounded     •    Josh’s take on drawing lines without losing empathy ✅ Follow + Connect 📲 Instagram & TikTok: @findingmewithjoshwolf 🐦 X: @findingmepod 📘 Facebook: Finding Me with Josh Wolf ▶️ YouTube: @findingmewithjoshwolf 📩 Email: findingmewithjoshwolf@gmail.com ⭐️ Enjoying the show? Leave a 5-star rating + review — it helps more people find Finding Me. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The Nashville Exodus

The Nashville Exodus

2026-01-2311:39

Finding Me with Josh Wolf — Episode 15 Josh is en route to Chicago, but before he lands in the next chapter of life, he checks in to close the book on one of the wildest chapters yet: the Nashville leg of the Mold Run… and the long, chaotic final push to Las Vegas. Because the move wasn’t just “a move.” It was a full-blown saga. It took a legitimately crazy moving crew, a cross-country drive loaded with stress and uncertainty, and a stretch of travel haunted by the one thing nobody wanted to deal with on top of everything else: COVID. Add in the curveball of a dog who apparently required the same standards as a touring rockstar—including his own hotel room—and what should have been a simple relocation turns into a survival story with luggage. But then the episode pivots into something nobody sees coming. Josh shares a strange and unexpected realization: as awful as COVID was, there’s a real possibility it may have fixed him—a shocking twist after months of chasing answers, fighting invisible enemies, and bouncing between homes in an attempt to reclaim health. And finally… Vegas. For the first time in a long time, the story carries a different tone. A calmer one. Not because everything is perfect, but because they’ve arrived. The running stops. The dust settles. And in Las Vegas, Josh and Beth can finally do the thing they’ve been desperate to do from the beginning: start healing for real. In this episode:     •    Josh checks in on the way to Chicago — and wraps up the Nashville chapter     •    The final push to Las Vegas: not a move… an ordeal     •    A moving crew straight out of a movie     •    The cross-country drive — and a brutal run-in with COVID     •    The dog’s VIP travel requirements (yes, including his own hotel room)     •    Josh’s surprising realization: COVID may have been the thing that finally helped     •    Arriving in Vegas — and the start of true healing ✅ Follow + Connect 📲 Instagram & TikTok: @findingmewithjoshwolf 🐦 X: @findingmepod 📘 Facebook: Finding Me with Josh Wolf ▶️ YouTube: @findingmewithjoshwolf 📩 Email: findingmewithjoshwolf@gmail.com ⭐️ If you’re enjoying the show, please leave a 5-star rating + review — it helps more people find Finding Me. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The Mold Saga Continues… and a New Enemy Appears Just when Josh and Beth thought they’d identified the “invisible enemy” ruining their health… the story takes another hard left. In this episode of Finding Me, the Mold Saga continues — but now there’s a new villain in the mix: mercury poisoning. As if mold wasn’t enough, Josh shares how their already exhausting search for answers suddenly expanded into an even more unsettling possibility… one that reframes symptoms, setbacks, and the sheer frustration of trying to heal when you don’t even know what you’re fighting. And because apparently this journey refuses to stay in one place — Josh and Beth take the show on the road to Nashville, hoping for a reset… only to discover something brutal: Nashville was worse than Los Angeles. Not just in vibe — in health, environment, and the overall sense that the universe was playing an elaborate prank on their attempt to recover. But this episode isn’t only about sickness. It’s also about the quiet ways your surroundings change you. Josh opens up about something deeply personal — who he slowly became during his time in LA. Not the version of himself he’s proud of. The version that started to harden. The version that wasn’t as happy for other comics’ success as he used to be. It’s an honest, uncomfortable realization — and Josh doesn’t dodge it. He faces it, names it, and tries to understand what part of him got lost in the grind… and how to find his way back to the guy he actually wants to be. Because health isn’t just your body. It’s your spirit. Your relationships. Your generosity. Your ability to still feel joy when someone else wins. In this episode:     •    The Mold Saga continues… and the plot thickens     •    Mercury poisoning: the terrifying new health curveball     •    Why their Nashville experiment turned into a disaster (worse than LA)     •    How prolonged stress and survival mode can quietly change who you are     •    Josh’s honest realization about losing his ability to celebrate other comics     •    Addressing resentment, ego, and the path back to gratitude ✅ Follow + Connect (CTAs) 📲 Instagram & TikTok: @findingmewithjoshwolf 🐦 X: @findingmepod 📘 Facebook: Finding Me with Josh Wolf ▶️ YouTube: @findingmewithjoshwolf 📩 Email: findingmewithjoshwolf@gmail.com ⭐️ If you’re enjoying the show, please leave a 5-star rating + review — it helps more listeners find Finding Me. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Finding Me with Josh Wolf — Episode 13 When Survival Tests A Marriage The Mold Run continues — and somehow the story gets even crazier. In this episode, Josh lays out the insane number of places he and his wife Beth stayed in under a single year, all in pursuit of one thing: feeling healthy again. It’s part survival story, part logistical nightmare — the kind of relentless, nomadic grind that sounds impossible until you remember: when your body stops working the way it should, comfort becomes optional. As the journey stretches on, Josh also finds himself rethinking the entire idea of “healthcare.” He talks about his subtle shift toward eastern medicine — not as a trend, not as a rejection of science, but as a practical attempt to get to a place where he doesn’t need medicines anymore. Less management. More healing. Fewer bandaids. More root causes. And then there’s the hardest truth of all: even when you love someone, even when you’re doing this together, sustained stress can erode the foundation. Josh reflects on how the experience ultimately brought him and Beth closer… but also how, at times, it almost broke them. Because when you’re exhausted, scared, and chasing answers that keep moving — even the best partnership gets tested. This is a raw one. A real one. And for anyone who’s ever felt like their health journey was turning into a full-time life crisis — you’ll feel seen. In this episode:     •    The jaw-dropping list of places Josh and Beth stayed in less than a year     •    Why chasing health can turn life into a constant relocation     •    Josh’s growing pull toward eastern medicine and root-cause healing     •    The goal: fewer meds, more real recovery     •    How the ordeal strengthened their relationship… and nearly shattered it ✅ Follow + Connect (CTAs) 📲 Instagram & TikTok: @findingmewithjoshwolf 🐦 X: @findingmepod 📘 Facebook: Finding Me with Josh Wolf ▶️ YouTube: @findingmewithjoshwolf 📩 Email: findingmewithjoshwolf@gmail.com ⭐️ If you’re enjoying the show, a 5-star rating + review helps more people find it. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Comments (5)

Samuel Payton

Hay you ever tried bacon cheese?

Aug 27th
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Michael Wasson

theme song..... Filter/ hey man nice shot

Aug 17th
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