The Hybrid Athlete: Building a Body That’s Hard to Kill
Zion National Park — Savage buddy who slept in his wetsuit for a week climbing out of rivers. We’ve raced 50K and 100K mountain races together while maintaining strength.
“Be the kind of human you can drop into any environment — and thrive.”
The Myth of Either/Or
Somewhere along the way, fitness got divided into tribes.
Endurance athletes that don’t do strength will wither away, strength athletes that don’t do endurance can’t sustain.
Health isn’t about specialization. It’s about resilience — the ability to adapt.
That’s what being a hybrid athlete means: strong enough to carry load, fit enough to sustain it, and disciplined to keep doing it for decades.
What “Hard to Kill” Really Means
It’s not about being extreme. It’s about being ready.
A body that can sprint, hike, lift, and play with your kids.
A heart that can handle stress without breaking.
A mind that stays sharp when things go sideways.
When I talk about being “hard to kill,” I’m not romanticizing suffering — I’m describing robustness.
The ability to withstand volatility, both physical and emotional.
That’s what strength and endurance training really teach: how to keep showing up under load.
The Hybrid Equation
I think of training like portfolio construction:
| Category | Allocation | Objective |
|---|---|---|
| Strength | 2–4 sessions/week | Preserve and build muscle; improve power-to-weight ratio |
| Zone 1 & 2 Cardio | 4-12 hrs/week | Build mitochondrial density and metabolic flexibility |
| High Intensity / Zone 5 | 1 session/week | Maintain top-end performance; raise VO₂ max |
| Mobility / Prehab | 10 mins/1-2x per day | Prevent injuries, improve longevity, not sexy but worth it |
| Recovery | Daily | Sleep, nutrition, breathwork, and active recovery |
Your body is a portfolio. Consistency is the compound interest.
…you are loved
