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7+ oeuvres 89 utilisateurs 2 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Scott Douglas is senior content editor for Runner's World and is the author and coauthor of seven books on running, including The Little Red Book of Running. Douglas lives in South Portland, Maine.

Œuvres de Scott Douglas

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Date de naissance
1964
Sexe
male

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In 2003, my 42 year old cousin passed away from cancer. He was an avid runner, and each year took part in Atlanta's Peachtree Road Race. I decided to take up running after he passed so that I could keep running the race in his honor and memory. That decision led to an almost decade long love affair with running. Well, sometimes love, sometimes pure avarice, but I kept running. Through rain, winter weather, in Nikes, Vibrams, huaraches, and even bare feet. Then, somewhere around 2013 or so, I stopped. I lost my mojo.

This book has me eager to run again, though for different reasons. Now I'm 52. I deal with anxiety, and on some days, a partly cloudy mood that feels like minor depression takes hold. I don't want to take meds and I want to steer the mental ship back on course. I want to live a life that holistically mitigates the symptoms and causes of anxiety and minor depression. And so, while I used to run as a form of fitness, as exercise, as a way to honor a lost loved one and to 'find myself', I am now contemplating running to - for lack of a better term - save my life. To keep the wolves at bay, to find a sense of hunger and ambition again, to shake off the listlessness and malaise. This book was a great tool in inspiring that.

In concise, digestible chapters, Douglas addresses how running helps with anxiety, mood, and depression. He speaks to how running creates a structure for the brain, goals that are attainable and easy to build upon, even if you are only running short distances at a glacial pace (which is my current M.O.). He addresses how antidepressants affect running (a chapter I merely skimmed, as that's not a road I wish to go down, but it was helpful to see the science of it), and how such tools as mindfulness align with running.

Some of the information here is common sense and some of it was newly enlightening because he shares some data/science I wasn't aware of that contextualizes the claims. Mostly, I used this book as leverage to inspire me to run not because I need to lose 15 lbs or to prove I've still "got it", but because now it's a health issue, on a physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual level. I need to move to stave off some monsters before they grow too big, before they get more nimble and learn to outrun me. Before their whispered chants of "you can't, you won't" grow to drown out the still audible hum of my better angels.

This is a book for anyone who runs because it keeps them "on track"...or for anyone who is willing to entertain the notion that running might be a valuable tool in their arsenal against challenging mindsets, emotions, and even chronic disorders. Douglas states more than once that running is not a cure for any of these challenges, but it is another scientifically-backed, all natural resource that might make your journey easier and more joyful.
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Signalé
TommyHousworth | 1 autre critique | Feb 5, 2022 |
A book focused on, as the author succintly puts it, "integration of body and mind via running in managing depression and anxiety".

The first part of the book shares the author's personal experiences with their professional writing career, and how running has helped them with anxiety. It also delves into the mental health benefits of running (a minimum of twice a week is suggested), along with ample evidence and scientific data backing up their claims.

The second part of the book, and the meat of the reading, focuses on the "intersection of running and several forms of therapy". Each chapter clearly delineates what it covers: Running and Antidepressants, How Running Affects Your Mood, Running and Behavioral Therapy, and so forth.

This review sounds and probably feels a bit clinical - and it is. Why? I feel it matches the tone of the book - odd, considering the author shares much of their personal (and sometimes painful) experiences, in a friendly and engaging manner. Yet you can't take the journalist out of the book, and so, I found this book to read more like a highly researched magazine article. Very informative, chock full of scientific journal summaries and experts in both running and mental health. And yet... it's missing something for me.

Perhaps it's that I'm not technically a runner. The author states early on, "to be a runner, you just have to run". WIth that criteria, I am a runner. Have I struggled with depression in the past? You betcha. Do I now? No. So this may be where it falls flat for me. It's clinical, it's informative, and it's well-written. I, however, want a bit more color and 'oomph' in my books.

I would definitely recommend this book for library purchase; there are likely no other books on this specific topic, and it would be a great reference material or starting off point for students of mental health and/or running as therapy.
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Signalé
bonnyadventures | 1 autre critique | Feb 3, 2019 |

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Œuvres
7
Aussi par
1
Membres
89
Popularité
#207,492
Évaluation
4.0
Critiques
2
ISBN
52
Langues
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