Joshua Hamilton
Men's Coach, Athlete & Student of Ancient Masculinity
There is a version of a man's life that looks complete from the outside and feels hollow from the inside. Josh has spent two decades figuring out why — and what to do about it. He has stood on the start line at the World Multisport Championships, navigated remote terrain on two wheels, skied the Alps, and travelled the world not as a tourist but as a student — of ancient initiations, masculine rites of passage, and the deep architecture of what it means to be a man.
Over twenty years, Josh has worked with more than 1,200 men across New Zealand, Australia, South Africa, and the United States. Not men who are failing. Men who are winning by every visible measure and quietly wondering if this is as good as it gets. His work lives at the intersection of masculine identity, psychological depth, and biological performance. It is not motivational. It is not theoretical. It is a structured dismantling of the patterns, beliefs, and emotional suppression that sit between a man and the life he actually wants.
Men who work with Josh often say the same thing: it was the first time another man saw them clearly and refused to let them stay small. He lives in New Plymouth, New Zealand, with his wife Fleur and son Oakley — and can usually be found on a gravel road, deep in a good book, or taking his time with a whisky that earned its age.