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🧬Longevity & Healthy Aging·14 menit

Peter Attia's Centenarian Decathlon: A 5-Year Training Framework for Functional Longevity

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Train now for the physical tasks you want to perform at 90—here's the exact framework with progressive benchmarks.

🕓 Diperbarui: 2026-05-23

Artikel ini hanya untuk informasi umum dan bukan pengganti nasihat, diagnosis, atau perawatan medis profesional. Selalu konsultasikan dengan tenaga kesehatan yang berkualifikasi untuk pertanyaan tentang kondisi medis.

What If Your 90-Year-Old Self Could Send You a Training Plan?

Picture this: you're 90, and your grandkid asks you to carry their 30-pound toddler up a flight of stairs. Can you do it? Peter Attia, the longevity-focused physician who wrote Outlive, built his entire training philosophy around this question. He calls it the Centenarian Decathlon—ten physical tasks you want to perform in the last decade of your life. The catch? You need to start training for them decades earlier.

I've spent the last year reverse-engineering Attia's framework into something you can actually use. Not vague advice about "staying active." Real numbers. Progressive targets. A 5-year roadmap that accounts for the 10% decline in VO2max per decade that hits everyone after 30.

Here's what that looks like.

The Centenarian Decathlon: Defining Your Personal Events

Attia's original list isn't prescriptive—it's personal. His includes carrying groceries, getting up from the floor without using hands, and playing with grandchildren on the ground. But the underlying principle is universal: identify the activities that would make your final decade worth living, then work backward.

Most people's lists cluster around similar themes. Picking up a 30-pound object from the floor (think: a bag of dog food, a small child). Walking up three flights of stairs without stopping. Getting off a toilet without grabbing anything. Carrying two grocery bags for a quarter mile. Playing 18 holes of golf or hiking 3 miles on uneven terrain.

The math gets uncomfortable fast. If you want a VO2max of 18 at age 90 (the minimum for independent living, according to the Journal of Aging and Physical Activity), and you're losing roughly 10% per decade, you need a VO2max of about 32 at age 60. That's above average for a 60-year-old. Which means if you're 40 right now with a VO2max of 35, you're already behind.

Attia updated his thinking in a 2025 Early Medical podcast episode. He now emphasizes that the Centenarian Decathlon isn't about becoming an elite athlete. It's about building what he calls "marginal decade reserve"—extra capacity that buys you independence when things inevitably decline.

Zone 2 Training: The Aerobic Foundation

Here's a number that surprised me: Attia recommends 3-4 hours of zone 2 cardio per week. That's not a typo. Three to four hours.

Zone 2 is that conversational pace where you can talk but you'd rather not. Your heart rate sits around 60-70% of max. It feels almost too easy, which is exactly why most people skip it. They'd rather do 30 minutes of HIIT and call it a day.

But zone 2 does something HIIT can't. It builds mitochondrial density in slow-twitch muscle fibers. These are the fibers you use for everyday activities—walking, standing, carrying things. The 2024 ACSM Guidelines for older adult exercise prescription specifically highlight zone 2 training as the primary intervention for maintaining functional independence.

What does a progressive 5-year zone 2 plan look like?

Year 1: 120 minutes per week (three 40-minute sessions). Year 2: 150 minutes per week. Year 3: 180 minutes per week. Year 4: 200 minutes per week. Year 5: 210-240 minutes per week.

The modality matters less than consistency. Walking on an incline treadmill works. So does cycling, rowing, or swimming. Attia personally uses a stationary bike while answering emails. The key metric is time in zone, not distance or calories.

One practical tip: get a chest strap heart rate monitor. Wrist-based monitors are notoriously inaccurate during steady-state exercise, often reading 10-15 beats too low. If you think you're in zone 2 but you're actually in zone 3, you're building a different energy system entirely.

Strength Training: The Non-Negotiable Minimums

Muscle mass peaks around age 30, then declines 3-8% per decade. After 60, that rate accelerates. By 80, most people have lost 30-40% of their peak muscle mass. This isn't just about looking good—it's about having enough strength reserve to recover from a fall, open a jar, or push yourself out of a chair.

Attia's minimum strength benchmarks, updated in his 2025 podcast discussions, are surprisingly accessible:

  • Farmer's carry: bodyweight (split between two hands) for 2 minutes
  • Dead hang: 60 seconds (30 seconds for women)
  • Goblet squat: 50% bodyweight for 10 reps
  • Step-up: 18-inch box with bodyweight only, 10 reps per leg
  • Floor get-up: rise from lying flat without using hands

These aren't impressive numbers for a gym regular. That's the point. They represent the minimum viable strength for functional independence. If you can't hit these now, you're already in deficit.

The 5-year progression focuses on building 20-30% above these minimums by year 5. Why the buffer? Because you'll lose strength during illness, injury, or life disruptions. Having reserve means a two-week flu doesn't drop you below functional thresholds.

Training frequency: 2-3 sessions per week, 45-60 minutes each. The 2024 Journal of Aging and Physical Activity found that twice-weekly resistance training maintained muscle mass in adults over 65, but three times weekly produced modest gains. For those under 50, three sessions allows for actual strength building, not just maintenance.

Stability Work: The Most Neglected Component

Ask someone about their workout routine and they'll mention cardio, maybe weights. Almost nobody mentions stability training. This is a mistake with compounding consequences.

Falls are the leading cause of injury death in adults over 65. One in four Americans over 65 falls each year. Of those who fall, 20-30% suffer moderate to severe injuries. Hip fractures are particularly devastating—20% of hip fracture patients die within a year.

Stability isn't just balance. It's the integration of vision, proprioception (knowing where your body is in space), and reactive strength. It degrades faster than cardiovascular fitness or raw strength because it requires neural coordination that suffers from disuse.

Attia's stability protocol includes three categories:

Static balance: Single-leg stance with eyes closed, working toward 30 seconds per leg. This sounds trivial until you try it. Most 40-year-olds can't hold 15 seconds.

Dynamic balance: Walking on uneven surfaces, lateral shuffles, backward walking. The goal is exposing your nervous system to unpredictable perturbations.

Reactive stability: Catching yourself when pushed, stepping over obstacles while carrying objects. This is where most falls actually happen—not standing still, but during transitions.

Time investment: 10-15 minutes daily, ideally integrated into your warm-up. The ACSM 2025 guidelines recommend balance training at least 3 days per week for adults over 50, but daily practice shows faster adaptation.

The 5-Year Progressive Framework

Let me lay out what this actually looks like week-to-week.

Year 1: Foundation Zone 2: 3x40 minutes. Strength: 2x45 minutes full-body. Stability: 10 minutes daily. Weekly total: approximately 5 hours.

The focus is building habits, not hitting numbers. Most people overestimate their current fitness. Year 1 is about honest assessment and consistent practice.

Year 2: Volume Building Zone 2: 3x50 minutes. Strength: 2x50 minutes. Stability: 10 minutes daily. Add one VO2max session (4x4 minute intervals) every other week. Weekly total: approximately 6 hours.

This is where zone 2 volume starts climbing. The occasional high-intensity session maintains top-end capacity without interfering with aerobic base building.

Year 3: Strength Emphasis Zone 2: 3x50 minutes. Strength: 3x45 minutes with progressive overload focus. Stability: 15 minutes daily with reactive drills. Weekly total: approximately 7 hours.

The third strength session allows for actual strength gains. This is the year to push toward those 20-30% above-minimum benchmarks.

Year 4: Integration Zone 2: 4x45 minutes. Strength: 3x45 minutes. Stability: 15 minutes daily. Add sport-specific practice if applicable (golf, hiking, tennis). Weekly total: approximately 7.5 hours.

Four zone 2 sessions might mean splitting one into two shorter sessions. The sport-specific work connects your fitness to actual activities you want to perform.

Year 5: Maintenance Plus Zone 2: 4x50 minutes. Strength: 2-3x45 minutes. Stability: 15 minutes daily. Periodic testing against Centenarian Decathlon benchmarks. Weekly total: approximately 7-8 hours.

By year 5, you're maintaining well above minimum thresholds. The focus shifts to sustainability and enjoyment. If you dread every workout, you won't continue for decades.

Testing Your Functional Capacity

Numbers mean nothing without measurement. Attia recommends quarterly assessments of key benchmarks.

For VO2max, a laboratory test is ideal but impractical for most people. The 12-minute Cooper test (run as far as possible in 12 minutes) provides a reasonable estimate. A 40-year-old man covering 1.5 miles has an estimated VO2max around 35.

For strength, test your benchmarks directly. Can you farmer's carry bodyweight for 2 minutes? Time your dead hang. Count your goblet squat reps at 50% bodyweight.

For stability, the single-leg stance with eyes closed is surprisingly diagnostic. Under 10 seconds at any age suggests significant fall risk.

Track these numbers in a simple spreadsheet. The trends matter more than any single measurement. A 5% decline over a year is normal aging. A 15% decline suggests something's wrong—illness, overtraining, or life stress affecting recovery.

Common Mistakes and Course Corrections

I've watched dozens of people attempt this framework. The failure modes are predictable.

Mistake 1: Starting too hard. Enthusiasm leads to injury. The 50-year-old who hasn't exercised in years shouldn't start with 4 hours of weekly zone 2. Begin at 50% of the year 1 prescription and build over 8-12 weeks.

Mistake 2: Neglecting stability. It's boring. It doesn't make you sweat. People skip it. Then they fall at 72 and break a hip. Ten minutes daily is non-negotiable.

Mistake 3: Chasing intensity. HIIT feels productive. Zone 2 feels like you're not trying hard enough. Trust the process. The mitochondrial adaptations from zone 2 take months to manifest but last decades.

Mistake 4: Ignoring recovery. Sleep is when adaptation happens. Seven hours minimum. Eight is better. Attia has called sleep the most powerful longevity intervention available, more impactful than any supplement or medication.

Mistake 5: Going it alone. A physical therapist or qualified trainer can identify movement dysfunctions that lead to injury. One assessment per year is a worthwhile investment.

The Uncomfortable Math of Waiting

Here's what happens if you delay starting by five years.

At 45, you need a VO2max of approximately 38 to hit 18 at age 90, assuming standard decline rates. At 50, you need 42. At 55, you need 46—which puts you in the top 10% of your age group. The longer you wait, the harder the catch-up.

Strength follows similar math. Losing 5% of muscle mass per decade means starting with more buffer. Every year of delay narrows your margin.

This isn't meant to induce panic. It's meant to induce action. The best time to start was ten years ago. The second best time is this week.

The Centenarian Decathlon framework isn't about living forever. It's about compressing morbidity—staying functional until close to the end, then declining quickly rather than spending decades in disability. Attia calls this the "square the curve" approach to aging.

Your 90-year-old self can't send you a training plan. But they'd probably say something like this: start now, be consistent, and build more capacity than you think you'll need. The reserve is the point.

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📊 Statistik Utama

~10% per decade after age 30
VO2max decline rate
Journal of Aging and Physical Activity, 2024
3-4 hours
Recommended weekly zone 2 volume
Peter Attia, Early Medical podcast, 2025
30-40% of peak
Muscle mass loss by age 80
ACSM Guidelines, 2025
25% (1 in 4)
Annual fall rate in adults 65+
CDC National Center for Injury Prevention, 2024
~20%
Hip fracture 1-year mortality
Journal of Aging and Physical Activity, 2024

5-Year Centenarian Decathlon Training Progression

YearZone 2 (weekly)Strength SessionsStability (daily)Total Hours/Week
Year 13×40 min (120 min)2×45 min10 min~5 hours
Year 23×50 min (150 min)2×50 min10 min~6 hours
Year 33×50 min (150 min)3×45 min15 min~7 hours
Year 44×45 min (180 min)3×45 min15 min~7.5 hours
Year 54×50 min (200 min)2-3×45 min15 min~7-8 hours

Progressive weekly training volumes building toward Centenarian Decathlon readiness

Pertanyaan Umum

What exactly is the Centenarian Decathlon?
It's a personalized list of 10 physical tasks you want to perform in the last decade of your life (ages 90-100). Examples include carrying a 30-pound object, climbing stairs without assistance, and getting up from the floor without using hands. The concept comes from Peter Attia's book Outlive and represents the functional capacity needed for independent living in old age.
How do I know if I'm training in zone 2?
Zone 2 is approximately 60-70% of your maximum heart rate—a pace where you can hold a conversation but would prefer not to. For accurate tracking, use a chest strap heart rate monitor rather than a wrist-based device, which can read 10-15 beats too low during steady-state exercise. The effort should feel sustainable for over an hour.
Is 3-4 hours of zone 2 cardio really necessary?
Attia recommends this volume based on research showing mitochondrial adaptations require sustained time in zone. However, starting with less (90-120 minutes weekly) and building gradually over years is more sustainable than jumping to high volumes immediately. The key is consistency over intensity.
What if I can't meet the minimum strength benchmarks right now?
That's valuable information—it means you're starting in deficit and need to prioritize strength building. Work with a qualified trainer to develop a progressive program targeting these minimums within 6-12 months. Don't be discouraged; these benchmarks are achievable for most healthy adults with consistent training.
How important is stability training compared to cardio and strength?
Critically important, though often neglected. Falls are the leading cause of injury death in adults over 65, and stability degrades faster than cardiovascular fitness or strength. The 10-15 minutes daily recommendation is non-negotiable for long-term functional independence.
Can I start this framework if I'm already over 60?
Absolutely, though you'll need to adjust expectations and potentially work with healthcare providers. The principles remain the same: build zone 2 base, maintain strength above minimum thresholds, and practice stability daily. Starting volumes should be lower, and progression should be more gradual. The framework scales to any starting point.
How often should I test my functional capacity benchmarks?
Quarterly testing provides enough data to spot trends without becoming obsessive. Track VO2max estimates (via Cooper test or similar), strength benchmarks (farmer's carry, dead hang, goblet squat), and stability (single-leg stance with eyes closed). Focus on trends over time rather than any single measurement.

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