Review: How running helped a young mother cope with grief
By Christie Aschwanden March 14 at 3:00 PM Grief has a way of reawakening us to our own bodies. When Katie Arnold’s father was diagnosed with cancer, she turned to running — not for speed or for fitness but “to get out of the house and escape the dread,” she writes in her memoir, “Running Home.” She ran “to feel normal again, and just a little bit alive.”
Arnold became a runner at the age of 7, “by accident.” She was visiting her father in Virginia when he suggested that Arnold and her older sister enter a local 10k race. “The distance was so audacious that it meant absolutely nothing to me. I had never run a race, never a single mile, let alone six, all in a row,” she writes. The siblings agreed to run while their father, a National Geographic photographer, documented the event.
The author Katie Arnold Not long after her father died, Arnold signed up for a 31-mile ultramarathon, and soon she was running in 50- and even 100-mile events. She writes with candor about the strain her running sometimes put on her marriage.
इंडिया ताज़ा खबर, इंडिया मुख्य बातें
Similar News:आप इससे मिलती-जुलती खबरें भी पढ़ सकते हैं जिन्हें हमने अन्य समाचार स्रोतों से एकत्र किया है।
U.S. SEC to review stock trading rules in big potential shakeupThe U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is launching a review of the main se...
और पढो »
Review | Four new books to inspire young readersThree biographies and a novel highlight overcoming barriers to success
और पढो »
Samsung Chromebook Plus V2 ReviewSamsung Chromebook Plus V2 review: a good choice that doesn’t cost much more than lower-end devices ForbesFinds
और पढो »
Obama's former adviser says Silicon Valley giants must release their iron grip on everyone's dataFacebook, Apple, Google, Amazon, and Microsoft stifle the competition, Jason Furman's review said.
और पढो »
Appeals court rules immigrant may seek judicial review of expedited deportationThe American Civil Liberties Union says the ruling has far-reaching implications for immigrants, particularly at the border.
और पढो »
Review | Who wants to join the cult of video artist Matthew Barney?An artist once described as the most influential of his generation presents new work at his alma mater.
और पढो »
Review: Gig-economy firms tread precarious pathThe likes of Uber tapped casualised labour to become global giants. They have created a “precariat” class of workers, open to exploitation and abuse. Colin Crouch’s “Will the Gig Economy Prevail?” offers a manifesto for a benign alternative, but underplays technological shifts.
और पढो »