There is a point in training where effort becomes something more than discomfort. It becomes a gateway. In endurance racing, hybrid competition, OCR, track work, and any event demanding repeated high-output intensity, athletes eventually cross into a place where mechanics, physiology, and perception collide. Richard Diaz calls that place the Dark Side —the realm of intense anaerobic effort where races are won, limits are tested, and performance is either elevated or derailed. Training the Dark Side introduces the early architecture of Diaz’s Flow concepts, years before his later books expanded the philosophy. What began as an attempt to decode why some athletes thrive under extreme demands became a four-year exploration into the mechanics of suffering, the psychology of pace under duress, and the physiology that governs the shift from aerobic efficiency to anaerobic strain. This book documents that journey. Inside, Diaz outlines a fresh, adaptable approach to running and high-intensity endurance performance. He explains how to train for races that demand both endurance and power, how to move efficiently when fatigue threatens mechanics, and how to manage the rising chaos of anaerobic effort without losing control of form or intention. These concepts apply across the spectrum—from marathon pacing to track intervals, from OCR racing to HYROX competition. Featured in the book are insights and testimonials from elite athletes Diaz has coached, including world champions and top-tier hybrid competitors. Their experiences illustrate the practical application of these methods at the highest level of performance. You’ll learn: How to approach training when races demand repeated anaerobic surges - Why the “Dark Side” is not something to avoid, but a state to understand and master - Practical methods for developing speed, endurance, and mechanical resilience - How Flow begins to emerge when challenge and skill converge under extreme effort - Strategies for training runners and hybrid athletes who must perform under sustained intensity Training the Dark Side stands as the bridge between traditional endurance coaching and the deeper Flow-based principles Diaz explores in Flow—Breaking Barriers of Athletic Performance and ultimately in RUN , his most comprehensive work. It remains a favorite among runners, HYROX athletes, and OCR competitors who recognize that success requires not only aerobic strength but also the ability to operate with clarity and control when the effort turns dark. If you’ve ever wondered why races fall apart in the final third, why mechanics crumble under intensity, or how elite athletes sustain power when others fade, this book offers the first blueprint for understanding—and mastering—the Dark Side of effort.