You Were Built for More Than This.

The Agoge is a structured 12-month brotherhood for men who refuse to keep living beneath who they were created to be.

You are disciplined enough to get things done.
You carry weight most men never will.
You've been the guy everyone else leans on.

But something is off and you know it.

The discipline comes and goes. The drift keeps returning. The gap between who you are and who you know you're capable of being — it's still there. The Agoge exists for that gap.

Through three structured calls per week, elite physical accountability, a brotherhood of men operating at the same standard, and a 12-month curriculum built around the four pillars of a man's life — we rebuild the internal structure that turns capable men into complete ones.

Limited To 200 Men Per Year.

You Already Know

What You Should Be Doing

That's what makes this so frustrating.

You're not looking for information. You've read the books. You've watched the videos. You've had enough motivation to move mountains — for about three weeks at a time.

The problem isn't knowledge.

The problem is that knowing and doing are two completely different things. And the space between them is where most men live their entire lives.

Here's what that looks like in practice:

  • You know you should be training consistently. You're not.
  • You know what kind of husband and father you want to be. The daily reality doesn't match.
  • You know you're capable of more in your work. The cycles of momentum and burnout keep interrupting.
  • You feel it — that quiet sense that you're not living up to the man you were created to be.

That last one is the one men don't say out loud.

They'll say they want to get in shape. They'll say they want to grow their business. But what they're really saying — when you get them on a call and ask the right question — is that they don't feel like the man they're supposed to be. Not as a father. Not as a husband. Not in their own skin.

That's not a motivation problem. That's a structure problem.

Here's what I've learned watching hundreds of men walk through this: a man doesn't change until the pain of staying where he is becomes greater than or equal to the pain of what it takes to change. That's not weakness — it's how men are wired. The men who find The Agoge have usually hit that line. They're done tolerating the gap. They're ready to pay the price of change because they've already been paying the price of staying stuck.

When a man doesn't have a framework holding his life together — his faith, his fitness, his family, his finances all pulling in different directions with no system underneath them — he drifts. Even the best men drift without structure.

The Agoge is the structure.

I Know What It Costs to Drift.

September 15, 2012. Camp Lejeune, North Carolina.

I walked out the front doors of Marine Special Operations Command with my DD214 in hand. 12 years. Force Recon. Marine Raider. Multiple combat deployments. I had given everything I had to that unit and to the 14 men on my team — men who lived next door, whose wives were friends, whose kids went to school together. That team was my world.

The doors closed behind me and I couldn't go
back in.

I stood at the MARSOC Memorial with the American flag snapping in the breeze, thinking I was free. That the hard part was over. That I'd navigate civilian life the same way I'd navigated everything else — by sheer force of will and forward momentum.

I was wrong about almost everything.

What I didn't understand was what I was actually losing. It wasn't the rank or the paycheck. It was the structure. The mission. The 14 men on my team who had my back in every situation — who understood without explanation what I'd been through, what I'd seen, what the job had cost. That infrastructure was gone overnight. And the team kept moving. Deployments continued. The brotherhood I thought would always be there got absorbed back into the operational tempo, and I became out of sight, out of mind.

I was alone in a way I had never been in my adult life.

What followed was a slow unraveling I didn't recognize until I was deep in it. The marriage fell apart. The drinking got bad — not dramatic, just steady and numbing. When I wasn't drinking I was on my phone, in games, anywhere I didn't have to sit with what I was feeling. I stayed in the gym but the results went sideways because everything surrounding the training was a mess — the diet, the sleep, the hormones, all of it was off. I had the exterior of a capable man and the interior of someone drowning.

By 2016 it hit bottom. Bankruptcy. The money gone. Rumors circulating publicly that I was stealing from nonprofits — while I was quietly losing everything. I had a wife, kids, a mortgage, a reputation being dismantled, and no team to call. The drinking continued. The numbing continued. And there was a night on the beach where I was closer to the edge than I've been anywhere in combat.

I don't say that for effect. I say it because the men who find The Agoge have often stood somewhere near that line — and they need to know that the man who built this program has stood there too.

What pulled me back that night wasn't a program or a podcast. It was remembering who I was. The cloth I was cut from. The things I had survived, accomplished, earned — not because life made them easy but because I was built to do hard things. That warrior spirit doesn't disappear when the uniform comes off. It gets buried. And the work is dragging it back into the light.

That became the work. From 2016 forward I started the rebuild. I got my hormones properly addressed. I fixed the training and the nutrition. I made the decision to stop drinking — which became permanent in August 2019. I owned my situation completely — not the circumstances that created it, but my response to every single one of them. I found my faith. I found Ali. I became the man God had been building through every hard thing I'd been handed.

In 2018 — after the rebuild had already begun — I co-founded Johnny Slicks with $400. It became an eight-figure American-made grooming brand. The Agoge followed, because I built the system I needed and couldn't find when everything was falling apart.

Not a motivational program. Not a podcast with tips. A structured brotherhood with a system — the kind that holds a man's life together the way a team holds a mission together.

That's what this is.

This Is Not a coaching Program.

It's a structured 12-month brotherhood built around a complete system for becoming the man you were created to be.

Inside the Agoge, you get three live calls per week, a fully structured training and nutrition system, weekly accountability check-ins with a coach, a community of men operating at the same standard, and a 12-month curriculum organized into four 90-day phases — each one building on the last.

Here's exactly how it works:

Three Live Calls Every Week

Tuesday 9AM — The core leadership call. Each week we work through the pillars that structure a man's life: his sovereignty, his fitness, his family, his finances. Direct instruction, accountability, and application.

Thursday 3PM EST — Human Performance. Physical and mental optimization. This is where the training and health conversations live.

Friday 9AM — Men of Faithful Action. The faith and spiritual call. Foundational principles applied to how you actually live.

Accountability That Actually Works

Every week, you complete a structured check-in through Trainerize — training, nutrition, habits. A coach reviews it. You get direct feedback.
This is not a passive community where you lurk. You are seen, and you are held to your word.

A Community Built for Men Who Do the Work

The brotherhood lives inside Mighty Networks. The curriculum — organized into phases with education, tools, and milestones — lives there too. This is not a Facebook group.

It is a curated environment where every man has been vetted and accepted.

A 12-Month Curriculum with Real Phases

Each quarter is a 90-day phase. You don't just drift through content — you move through a structured progression with clear milestones and accountability at every step.

Phase 1 — Master Yourself
Phase 2 — Lead Your Family
Phase 3 — Master Your Finances
Phase 4 — Build Your Legacy

The Agoge Is Built on Four Pillars.

FITNESS

Your body is the foundation everything else is built on. Physical discipline creates mental toughness, confidence, and resilience. When a man builds his body, he builds his will. You receive structured training and nutrition programming through Trainerize — tracked, coached, and accountable.

DISCIPLINE

Discipline is the ability to execute regardless of how you feel. No more three-week bursts followed by two-month crashes. Inside the Agoge you build the daily structure required to operate consistently — through difficulty, through distraction, through every season of life.

Belief

Most men carry limiting beliefs they've never examined. Old narratives from childhood. Inner criticism that sounds like their own voice. Stories about what they deserve or what's possible for them. Inside the Agoge we surface those patterns, name them, and dismantle them — replacing them with a grounded belief in your own ability to lead.

Tribe

Tribe is not just the fourth pillar. It is the reason for all the others.

Your tribe — your family, the people depending on you, the legacy you are responsible for building — is your WHY. It is the reason the work is worth doing. It is what gets a man out of bed at 4AM to do burpees in a freezing garage when every other reason has run out.

Here's the truth about discipline: motivation will not sustain it. Comfort will not sustain it. Looking good will not sustain it. But if your son looks up to you — if he wants to be like you when he grows up — that will get you out of bed. That will carry you through the hard seasons. That is a why deep enough to make a man willing to suffer the pain of change.

Men are not built for isolation. The Agoge surrounds you with a brotherhood of men operating at the same standard — no excuses, no hiding, no drift. You sharpen each other. You hold each other to account. But the brotherhood exists in service of something bigger than itself: the families, the legacies, and the lives each of these men is going home to build.

When the Man Is Built, Everything Else Follows.

We do not promise that the Agoge will fix your marriage, grow your business, or straighten out your finances. We promise something more foundational than that.

When a man builds internal structure — real discipline, real belief, real brotherhood — everything in his life begins to align. Not because he chased those outcomes. Because he became the man capable of producing them.

  • His faith deepens because he's living by conviction instead of comfort.
  • His family receives the leadership it deserves.
  • His health becomes consistent because the system is in place.
  • His finances respond to the discipline he's built everywhere else.

This is what it means to become the man you were created to be.

The Agoge Creed

I choose the path of discipline over comfort.
I take ownership of my time, my actions, and my legacy.

I train my body because strength of body reveals strength of will.
I sharpen my mind because clarity creates leadership.

I refuse drift.
I reject excuses.
I confront adversity.

Surrounded by brotherhood, I rise to a higher standard.

I am not a victim of my past.
I am the architect of my future.

Discipline builds me.
Consistency defines me.

Purpose drives me.

I walk the path of The Agoge.

The Brotherhood

Most men today carry enormous responsibility in complete isolation.

They lead companies. They lead families. They are the person everyone else depends on. And they do it alone — with no men around them who will tell them the truth, hold them to their word, or challenge them to be better.

The Agoge changes that.

Inside the brotherhood, you are surrounded by men who refuse to drift. Men building businesses. Men leading families.

Men who have chosen to operate at a higher standard and hold each other accountable to it. Veterans, entrepreneurs, professionals, men of faith — all operating inside the same structure, toward the same standard.

This is not a support group. This is a tribe.

The Retreats

The retreats are where breakthroughs happen.

Away from the noise of daily life, men confront the patterns they've been carrying for years. You will train hard. You will have the conversations most men spend their entire lives avoiding. You will forge bonds that don't break when the retreat ends.

These are not optional add-ons. They are some of the most significant days in a man's year.

Retreat locations include Surf City and Kona.

Surf City, NC

Kona, Hawaii

What Happens When You Do the Work

These are men who were broken, checked out, medicated, or just quietly drowning. In their own words.

Timothy Esposito — Business Owner

I started at 284 lbs, depressed, blood pressure 190/125, blood sugar 475. Type 2 diabetic on multiple medications. My 6-year-old told me I was fat. In 90 days I dropped 30 lbs and was instructed by my doctor to stop my blood pressure meds, metformin, and lipitor. My boy now looks at me like I'm his superhero. No Excuses.

Fernando — Veteran

I was a broken man. Not a good husband, not a good father, and my business was a disaster. I lived with resentment and took it out on the people I loved. Nick and the Agoge changed my life. Discipline is rooted in me now. My belief in myself is unmatched and I live every day for my tribe and my why.

George Cano Jr. — Father

Never in my son's 12 years of life had he said 'I want to be like you when I grow up, Dad.' Then one night putting him to bed he says: 'Dad, I want to have muscles like you. Can you help me?' I cannot put into words the emotions I feel writing this. That moment alone makes all of this worth it.

Patrick Naughton

The calls have been messing with my head since I joined — in the best way. In December I'm about to make more money than I've ever made in a single month, and I'm more physically fit than when I was using gear. I couldn't afford the Agoge when I joined. That leap changed everything.

Joe Lavelle — Law Enforcement

I was in a rough spot when I reached out. Since joining the Agoge I revalued my relationships, went back to school for my master's, stopped drinking, and became the best father and husband I know how to be. My wife loves who I've become. The program gave me the structure to become the man I always knew I should be.

Bruce Raulukaitis

If you're reading this, you're exactly where you need to be. Everything about my life is better because I decided to come here for help. I used to look up to Nick and men like him. I still do — but it's different now. I am my own role model. That is thanks to this program. Find the balls to click the button. Be your own role model.

200 Men. No More.

The Agoge is capped at 200 members each year. Not because demand is low. Because standards are high.

Brotherhood only functions when every man inside it carries the same weight. A single man who won't do the work contaminates the standard for everyone around him. We keep the number tight so that every member receives the attention, accountability, and community that produces real results.

If you are accepted, you are joining a group of men who were selected for that reason.

Who the Agoge Is For

The Agoge is for the man who is done tolerating the gap between who he is and who he knows he can be.

He leads a family, a team, or a business. He is capable — genuinely capable — and that's exactly what makes the drift so frustrating. He doesn't need more information. He needs structure, accountability, and a brotherhood that won't let him off the hook.

He may be a veteran or first responder navigating life after service. He may be an entrepreneur who built something real but lost himself in the process. He may be a husband or father who knows his family deserves more from him. He shares a code — ownership, discipline, faith, service — regardless of where he came from.

This is not for men who:

  • Want motivation without the work
  • Make excuses and expect to keep making them
  • Are unwilling to be seen and held accountable
  • Are not ready to do genuinely difficult work

How It Works

Every man begins with a Fit Call.

This is not a sales call. It is a conversation to determine whether the Agoge is the right environment for you — and whether you are the right man for the Agoge. We take both sides of that seriously.

Step 1

Schedule your Fit Call.

Step 2

We determine alignment.

Step 3

If accepted, you join the brotherhood.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does membership actually include?

For $3,500 for the year — under $300 per month — you receive:



Three live 1-hour group calls per week with Nick Koumalatsos and the leadership team (156 calls over the year)

Fully structured training and nutrition programming through Trainerize

Weekly coach-reviewed accountability check-ins

Full access to the Mighty Networks community and curriculum

A 12-month structured curriculum organized into four 90-day phases with milestones

Access to retreat experiences (separate investment, strongly recommended)

Brotherhood with vetted, accepted men operating at the same standard

Monthly payment options are available through Affirm for members who prefer to manage cash flow that way.

Is this a fitness program?

Fitness is one of the four pillars, but the Agoge is not a gym program. It is a complete system for the four critical areas of a man's life: fitness, discipline, belief, and tribe. Men who join primarily for physical results consistently report that the transformation in the other three areas is what actually changes their life.

How much time does this require?

Three one-hour calls per week, plus your training and weekly check-in. The men who treat this like a serious commitment get serious results. The program rewards effort — the more you put in, the more the system returns to you.

Who leads the program?

The Agoge is led by Nick Koumalatsos and Josh Honsberger, supported by experienced mentors within the brotherhood. Nick brings 12 years in Special Operations, the full arc of losing everything and rebuilding it, and over a decade of coaching men through the same transition.

The Seat at This Table Is Earned.

Most men spend their entire lives knowing they were capable of more.

They never close the gap. Not because they lacked the ability. Because they never had the structure, the accountability, or the brotherhood to hold them to it.

The Agoge is that structure.
The Agoge is that accountability.
The Agoge is that brotherhood.

200 men per year. That is the limit. That is the standard. 



If you are ready to stop tolerating the drift — if you are ready to become the man your family needs, the man your purpose demands, the man you were created to be — 



Then schedule your Fit Call.

This conversation will tell us both what we need to know.

The Agoge accepts 200 men per year. Seats are filled through Fit Calls on a rolling basis.

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