Robin Arzón isn’t just a cycling instructor. She’s a life coach.
When the extraordinarily inspiring Arzón teaches a live-streamed indoor cycling class for Peloton, she’s not just talking cadence and resistance. She passionately challenges her thousands of riders to ask themselves “why not me?” She’s not just referring to crushing the workout. She’s talking about their goals off the bike, like getting a dream job, asking for more money or finding love. “The greatness you see in someone else is a mirror of your own potential,” she says.
Arzón wasn’t always a trend-setting fitness icon. She worked for seven years as a corporate lawyer. And during that time, as she contemplated a career change, she essentially asked herself that same question: “why not me?”
Well … why not her? Arzón left law behind in 2012 and created a new life for herself as a running coach, ultramarathoner and cycling instructor. And since teaching her first live class for Peloton in 2014, Arzón has amassed a huge following (her fans refer to her as “The Queen”) and is now a head instructor and vice president of fitness programming.
Know Your Value recently chatted with Arzón , 38, about how a near-death experience led her to fitness, and what pushed her to quit her job in law to work in the industry that she loves. She also shared her advice for women who are considering pivoting their career.
Know Your Value: You have a very intense and serious back story regarding your original impetus to getting more fit. Can you tell us what happened in 2002? What were the most critical takeaways for your personal growth and motivation after trauma?
Robin Arzón : Entering my senior year at NYU, I was out with friends at a wine bar in the East Village when a man entered and held me hostage at gunpoint. Ever since that day, I’ve actually lived every day as my last. The built-up trauma from that experience led me to start running the following year in law school. One day, I just decided to pick up a pair of running shoes and jog to class instead of driving. From there I started to test my ability to run further, and eventually fell in love with running marathons and ultimately ultra-marathons when I was a lawyer. I know strength because I’ve known deep fear, and it takes a lot of mental strength and resilience to be an athlete, which of course lends itself to every other area of my life.
Know Your Value: Your original career goal was working in law and you were a lawyer for years. What was the big “aha moment” for you when you decided to change direction and go for fitness as a fulltime career? Was it a gradual realization or did it crystallize quickly?
Robin Arzón : I realized that in my law career, I had spent years on something that no longer inspired passion and didn’t make me feel like I wanted to pay forward as a warrior of any particular message. There was never really an ‘aha’ moment where I knew I wanted to pursue fitness full time. It was more of a slow burn. When I was a lawyer, I would literally count down the minutes until I could leave the office and go out for a run or do a workout. Eventually I discovered I was living a divorced existence between athletics and law, and it was really important to me to change that and create a new life for myself in the fitness space.
Know Your Value: How did you end up at Peloton and what do you love most about working there?









