Close Menu
Healthtost
  • News
  • Mental Health
  • Men’s Health
  • Women’s Health
  • Skin Care
  • Sexual Health
  • Pregnancy
  • Nutrition
  • Fitness
  • Recommended Essentials
What's Hot

9 Easy Chia Pudding Recipes (+ The Perfect Pudding Ratio) • Kath Eats

May 4, 2026

Randomized controlled trial validates total hip arthroplasty to improve functional capacity

May 4, 2026

Dr. William O. Brant on male sexual health and the risks and benefits of supplements

May 4, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Healthtost
SUBSCRIBE
  • News

    Randomized controlled trial validates total hip arthroplasty to improve functional capacity

    May 4, 2026

    New genetic risk report reveals hidden risk of heart disease before symptoms appear

    May 3, 2026

    Five-target drug beats GLP-1/GIP therapy in obese diabetic mice

    May 3, 2026

    How fast your face ages can predict cancer survival outcomes

    May 2, 2026

    AI scribes save doctors time, but fail to reduce overtime

    May 2, 2026
  • Mental Health

    Every mental health journey starts with being seen

    May 2, 2026

    What animal studies teach us about toxic work environments

    April 27, 2026

    I hate hope: How to manage hope when you have treatment-resistant bipolar disorder

    April 19, 2026

    Rose Byrne is raw, magnetic and unfiltered as a woman in crisis

    April 18, 2026

    Can a single mother change her child’s surname in India?

    April 16, 2026
  • Men’s Health

    Dr. William O. Brant on male sexual health and the risks and benefits of supplements

    May 4, 2026

    3 Day Home Workout Plan: Build Muscle and Burn Fat

    April 30, 2026

    GLP-1 drugs promise broader health benefits, but experts advise caution on use

    April 28, 2026

    Trauma patients recover faster when medical teams know each other well, new study finds

    April 28, 2026

    I did red light therapy for 3 months so I shouldn’t have

    April 27, 2026
  • Women’s Health

    How to do a breast self-exam and spot lumps

    May 4, 2026

    Finding the best lupus treatments

    May 3, 2026

    What is the difference between UVA and UVB rays?

    May 1, 2026

    Are you a fungus fanatic? We unpack the nutritional trend of mushroom mania

    April 29, 2026

    What the Patients’ Bill of Rights Could Mean for Black Women

    April 29, 2026
  • Skin Care

    How I Did It: Fading Hormonal Hyperpigmentation Without Lasers

    May 3, 2026

    The truth about waterless care: What your skin really needs

    May 2, 2026

    What happens to your skin while you sleep? (the science of “Beauty Sle

    May 1, 2026

    Face Peeling Mask Guide: Shine Without Irritation

    April 28, 2026

    Is your moisturizing face mist really drying out your skin?

    April 28, 2026
  • Sexual Health

    Early signs of Peyronie’s disease and when to seek help

    May 3, 2026

    Boost erectile health and confidence

    May 1, 2026

    Judicial Restrictions on Abortion COVID-19 < SRHM

    April 30, 2026

    Can herpes affect fertility?

    April 29, 2026

    The Importance of Personalized Care in Medication Assisted Therapy (MAT) Programs I Novus

    April 28, 2026
  • Pregnancy

    Why is anemia during pregnancy high in Indian women?

    May 2, 2026

    5 things you need for the third trimester

    May 1, 2026

    Eating disorders in pregnancy and breastfeeding: Why “healthy eating” is not always easy

    May 1, 2026

    Comprehensive yoga for pregnancy, birth and beyond

    April 29, 2026

    Midwifery and Life – The postnatal health check New mums don’t know they can ask for

    April 28, 2026
  • Nutrition

    9 Easy Chia Pudding Recipes (+ The Perfect Pudding Ratio) • Kath Eats

    May 4, 2026

    A cancer-causing contaminant in drugs and meat

    May 3, 2026

    How Nutrition Supports Mood, Energy and Gut Health

    May 2, 2026

    How to create a self-care plan when you’re stressed

    May 1, 2026

    I answer the most HOT Questions about Fatty Liver

    April 29, 2026
  • Fitness

    The most underrated skill I wish everyone learned

    May 3, 2026

    Landmine Training and Why I Love It – Tony Gentilcore

    May 3, 2026

    9 Powerful Fitness Tips for Pear Shaped Bodies

    May 2, 2026

    If you can still do these 7 things at 60, your body is aging better than most

    May 2, 2026

    A Hike Leader’s Must-Have Kit

    April 30, 2026
  • Recommended Essentials
Healthtost
Home»Fitness»Inside the OPEX Method Week 5: Anaerobic training, “pain” and when it really makes sense
Fitness

Inside the OPEX Method Week 5: Anaerobic training, “pain” and when it really makes sense

healthtostBy healthtostFebruary 26, 2026No Comments8 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
Inside The Opex Method Week 5: Anaerobic Training, "pain" And
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

If a customer does 10 seconds of actual anaerobic work, may be needed 150 seconds of rest to recover the ATP they spent.

Compare it with a 30 seconds hard aerobic track, where rest can be 30 seconds. Same working time, totally different system.

Once trainers see this difference in rest, it is much easier to sense when a client is truly in anaerobic territory and when the session has just turned into hard aerobic work or random discomfort.

What counts as true anaerobic training?

OPEX calls anaerobic sessions “pain” or “unsustainable” for a reason. They are powerful, very stressful and cannot be repeated many times in a row without much rest.

In practice, true anaerobic work looks like:

  • Short to medium duration effort (often 10 to 60 seconds, sometimes up to 2 minutes)

  • Very high power output relative to the athlete’s ability

  • Long rest periods, about 10 to 20 times a working time

  • A definite drop in ability if rest is interrupted

An important point in the lecture was this: a lot of research that talks about “high-intensity training” actually describes hard aerobic worknot anaerobic work.

The classic example is the Tabata protocol: 20 seconds on, 10 seconds off, for 8 rounds or more.

It’s absolutely high-intensity, but it’s not high-intensity anaerobic in the way that OPEX defines it. The rest is too short for the athlete to reproduce true anaerobic power throughout the rounds.

What happens instead:

  • Early rounds may be anaerobic in intent

  • The body cannot rebuild ATP fast enough

  • The system shifts to more aerobic support to keep you alive

  • The output drops and turns into a “just survive” session.

You are no longer training the anaerobic system in a targeted manner. You are simply teaching the body to suffer from fatigue.

The version of OPEX for a real anaerobic interval looks more like:

10 seconds all out on Assault Bike, then 150 seconds rest.

Simple, ugly and very effective when used on the right person at the right time.

Because aerobics and strength should come first

On the EST side, OPEX uses the Continuation of MAP for the development of aerobic evolution in about a year. On the anaerobic side, they talk about a separate continuum for “pain”.

These two consecutively sit next to each other, not on top of each other. One does not automatically convert to the other, but a strong aerobic base is treated as a prerequisite before the client gains anaerobic work.

Two big boxes to check before the customer touches Anaerobic Training:

The light bulb analogy explains this well. If a light bulb can get very bright, it has the ability to generate a lot of internal power. This is like a powerful client with good engineers. This individual can now express substantial anaerobic work.

If someone is weak, new to resistance training, and moves poorly, they don’t produce enough force to hit the anaerobic system. They don’t do pain sessions. They are just sweaty and tired.

That’s why OPEX binds resistance training quality in anaerobic training. You don’t need to be strong to cycle easily for 30 minutes, but you definitely need strength and agility to sprint hard and recover from it.

Simple, Not Fancy: How OPEX Creates Anaerobic Advances

In Thursday’s workshops, coaches split into teams and constructed simple anaerobic progressions, all cyclical, over eight weeks.

Some key ideas emerged from this work:

  • Simple recipes are more difficultit doesn’t get any easier when done right

  • Mixed mode complex tracks hide the true contraction rate

  • “Sexuality” is in the execution, not the spreadsheet

A messy session might look like: 10 quick burpees, then a sprint bike, then jump rope, then repeat. It’s tough, but the turnover is inconsistent and the stimulus is blurry.

A pure anaerobic session is more like: 1 hard machine, 1 pure work period, 1 long rest period, repeat for a small number of sets.

Coaches would often look at their 8-week plans and say, “Is that it? It looks pretty basic.”

The answer was yes, it was must they look basic. The hard part is:

  • Hitting the right power at every interval

  • He gets enough rest

  • Making efforts repeatableunsustainable

If the client goes one minute hard and then rests, they have to go back and match that effort to the sets. This is what trains the anaerobic system, not a complicated list of movements.

Why anaerobic training is so messy in groups

Office hours posed a big practical question:

What happens if you try to perform an anaerobic progression in a group gym?

The short answer from OPEX: it turns into a mess.

Picture of 20 people doing a “pain” piece like push-ups and pull-ups:

  • 5 younger members do ring rows and goblet squats, rest often. They are basically doing cluster type strength work, not true anaerobic intervals.

  • 12 or so mid laners grind with empty rods and single pulls. Turnover is slow, fatigue sets in, and the track never reaches true anaerobic power.

  • 3 advanced members are unbroken and actually receive the prescribed dose.

The same happens in a simple cycling protocol if the group has a large spread of fitness. Some people will default to hard aerobic work because they simply cannot produce enough power long enough to tap into the anaerobic pathways.

With anaerobic training, dose response is everything. Hunter:

If only a small fraction of the room is actually getting that dose, then programmatically, you’re not doing what you say you’re doing.

This is why OPEX tends to keep anaerobic advances for:

Groups in the general population usually do much better with smart strength work and progressive aerobic training.

When anaerobic work really makes sense

During the lecture, three main “utility buckets” for OPEX Pain were laid out.

1. Athletic specificity

This is the clearest and strongest reason to use anaerobic training. Examples include:

  • Short to middle distance track and field athletes doing true sprint intervals

  • Field athletes such as soccer players who do 10- to 20-second high-intensity bouts with plenty of rest

  • Competitive CrossFit athletes who need serious lactate buffering to survive event formats

In these cases the sport requirements that the athlete handles these strenuous, unsustainable efforts.

2. Metabolic stress and body composition

Some trainers see anaerobic work as a way to boost fat loss, as the sessions are too taxing. The problem is the cost.

Anaerobic training is expensive in every way:

  • It takes high motivation and intention

  • It hits the nervous system hard

  • It needs a lot of restoration

You can get a strong metabolic response with much lower cost tools like hard but controlled aerobic intervals. So while you could use anaerobic work here, usually a bad choice.

3. Boosting aerobic capacity with a “lactic acid booster”

This landed with many coaches.

Think serious endurance runner, not Sunday jogger. They are racing a 10k and want to better handle the surges and hills after the race is over.

At 6 km a hill appears:

  • If they have trained in some anaerobic “booster” work, they can handle the spike in lactate and continue.

  • They could choose to retreat and avoid attempting the hill.

  • Or they could attack it and then get stuck because their system can’t clear and reuse the lactate.

In this case, small doses of anaerobic training support the aerobic system at times when the race temporarily jumps above steady pace.

Meet Assistant Instructor Steve Volke

Week 5 also featured one of the assistant trainers, Steve Volkeowner of OPEX Regina.

Steve and the head trainer have been side by side since the early days of OPEX Gym. He opened his gym that same year and was a coach for a long time.

Some reasons to be on the trainer team:

  • He is one general in the way he runs his business and his training.

  • He is thoughtful in how he builds relationships, programs and systems.

  • He has a powerlifting background and understands strength on a deep level.

  • Consistently runs one of the most OPEX profitable gyms.

Steve has also mentored OPEX gym owners and CCP coaches for years and now supports the Method cohort in workshops, office hours and Slack, along with the other assistant trainers.

What’s Next: Writing Complete Training Programs

Week 6 of the OPEX method shifts from individual pieces to the full picture: writing educational programs.

Coaches move from:

  • Long term cycles, long term planning

  • In mesocycles, shorter phases

  • Planning a daily schedule

The aim is to combine resistance training, aerobic work and, where appropriate, anaerobic work using clear principles of parallel training.

But the big issue remains the same. Keep it simple and transfer it to the customer’s real life. Fancy exercise choice is not the point. Moving people forward with clear intent is.

The program also continues to highlight the difference between knowledge and wisdom. Knowledge is an understanding of ATP, resting ratios and MAP models. Wisdom is taking that information and using it to help a client in a way that fits their goals, abilities and lifestyle.

If you want to delve deeper into this kind of thinking, you can learn more about OPEX Method Training and Coaching.

You can also watch strength coach and DPT Dr. David Skolnick to document his experience from week 5 in his vlog on the OPEX YouTube channel.

Key takeaways from Week 5: Pain with a Purpose

Anaerobic training looks cool on paper, but it is expensive and only useful for the right person, at the right time, with the right dose.

For most general population clients, a smart combination of strength and aerobic work will cover almost any goal they’re interested in. For advanced and athletically oriented clients, targeted anaerobic progressions can be a powerful tool as long as the coach respects the cost.

If you’re a coach, take a moment to ask: who on your roster has really earned this kind of job, and who needs to stay focused on the basics.

If you want more structure, support, and a clear model to follow, consider joining a future cohort of the OPEX method and turn knowledge into real coaching wisdom.

Anaerobic method OPEX Pain sense Training Week
bhanuprakash.cg
healthtost
  • Website

Related Posts

The most underrated skill I wish everyone learned

May 3, 2026

Landmine Training and Why I Love It – Tony Gentilcore

May 3, 2026

9 Powerful Fitness Tips for Pear Shaped Bodies

May 2, 2026

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss
Nutrition

9 Easy Chia Pudding Recipes (+ The Perfect Pudding Ratio) • Kath Eats

By healthtostMay 4, 20260

Looking for easy chia pudding recipes that you can make overnight? These healthy chia pudding…

Randomized controlled trial validates total hip arthroplasty to improve functional capacity

May 4, 2026

Dr. William O. Brant on male sexual health and the risks and benefits of supplements

May 4, 2026

How to do a breast self-exam and spot lumps

May 4, 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
TAGS
Baby benefits body brain cancer care Day Diet disease exercise finds Fitness food Guide health healthy heart Improve Life Loss Men mental Natural Nutrition Patients Pregnancy protein research reveals risk routine sex sexual Skin Skincare study Therapy Tips Top Training Treatment ways weight women Workout
About Us
About Us

Welcome to HealthTost, your trusted source for breaking health news, expert insights, and wellness inspiration. At HealthTost, we are committed to delivering accurate, timely, and empowering information to help you make informed decisions about your health and well-being.

Latest Articles

9 Easy Chia Pudding Recipes (+ The Perfect Pudding Ratio) • Kath Eats

May 4, 2026

Randomized controlled trial validates total hip arthroplasty to improve functional capacity

May 4, 2026

Dr. William O. Brant on male sexual health and the risks and benefits of supplements

May 4, 2026
New Comments
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Disclaimer
    © 2026 HealthTost. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.