- Running Home Katie Arnold
- Running Home A Memoir By Katie Arnold
- Katie Arnold Runner Instagram
- Katie Arnold Instagram
For more than a decade, Katie Arnold chased adventure around the world, reporting on extreme athletes who performed outlandish feats - walking high lines 1,000 feet off the ground without a harness, or running 100 miles through the night. She wrote her stories by living them, until eventually life on the thin edge of risk began to seem normal. Katie: Running Home, it’s about a lot of things. Predominantly, it’s about my relationship with running and with my father and how the two converged after he died in 2010. I was beset by this really crippling anxiety. I’d just had a new baby. I had a toddler and an infant. After he died, I became. RUNNING HOME tells the story of Katie's experience in caring for her dying father, grief, raising young children, and being an athlete. Though she seems superhuman with her endurance running, she is enlightening in her struggles with anxiety and in her attempt to balance her life between all of her roles as a mother, wife, athlete, writer,.
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Running Home PDF book by Katie Arnold Read Online or Free Download in ePUB, PDF or MOBI eBooks. Published in March 12th 2019 the book become immediate popular and critical acclaim in autobiography, memoir books.
The main characters of Running Home novel are John, Emma. The book has been awarded with Booker Prize, Edgar Awards and many others.
One of the Best Works of Katie Arnold. published in multiple languages including English, consists of 384 pages and is available in Hardcover format for offline reading.
Suggested PDF: Sword Art Online 10: Alicization Running pdf
Running Home PDF Details
Author: | Katie Arnold |
Book Format: | Hardcover |
Original Title: | Running Home |
Number Of Pages: | 384 pages |
First Published in: | March 12th 2019 |
Latest Edition: | March 12th 2019 |
Language: | English |
Generes: | Autobiography, Memoir, Non Fiction, Sports, Sports, Biography Memoir, Biography, Audiobook, Book Club, Biography, Autobiography, Sports, Fitness, Adventure, |
Formats: | audible mp3, ePUB(Android), kindle, and audiobook. |
The book can be easily translated to readable Russian, English, Hindi, Spanish, Chinese, Bengali, Malaysian, French, Portuguese, Indonesian, German, Arabic, Japanese and many others.
Please note that the characters, names or techniques listed in Running Home is a work of fiction and is meant for entertainment purposes only, except for biography and other cases. we do not intend to hurt the sentiments of any community, individual, sect or religion
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Excerpted from book 'Running Home' by Katie Arnold. Copyright © 2019 by Paper Sky LLC. Reprinted by permission of Random House, an imprint and division of Penguin Random House LLC. All Rights Reserved. The book released in March 2019.
Fifty kilometers is 31 miles.
Thirty-one miles is only five miles longer than the marathon I'd accidentally run with [fellow runner] Dean five years earlier. If I have to, I can always walk the last five miles.
Aside from Dean's can-do mantra --'Just run to the next tree' -- my only training advice comes from a professional ultrarunner named Darcy Piceu, who lives in Boulder, Colorado, and whom I'd recently interviewed for a magazine story. Darcy has a young daughter and a full-time job. She told me that the only thing that really matters when training for an ultra is your long run each week. She ran for six or seven hours every Saturday, trading childcare duties with her husband, who was also an endurance athlete. During the workweek, she said, as long as you get in some 'short' runs, you'll be fine. I figured Darcy must know what she was doing, because she'd finished fourth overall at the toughest mountain ultra in the country, the Hardrock 100, in the San Juan Mountains of Colorado.
Ultrarunning is one of the rare sports in which, at the highest level, women are physiologically capable of beating men; ultrarunners of both genders call this getting 'chicked' The longer the distance, the greater a female runner's advantage. In the '90s, ultra-legend Ann Trason won the women's division at [the] Western States 100 [endurance run] 14 times; she twice came in 2nd place overall and finished in the top ten 11 times. While there's plenty of anecdotal evidence of rampant chicking in the sport, there's little hard science to explain why females fare so well in extreme endurance. The most widespread speculation is that women's innate ability to withstand the ardors of childbirth also enables them to keep going for hours in other pursuits, even when they feel that they will surely perish from the effort.
My own labor with Pippa lasted 30 hours, an ultramarathon of childbirth. I subsisted on Popsicles and contraband energy bars [my husband] Steve smuggled in when the nurses weren't looking. People kept handing me giant plastic cups of water and begging me to drink. I declined an epidural; I'd decided to do it naturally, as my mother had with me. ('I don't remember any pain!' she reassured me, with a straight face.) The pain was outrageous and unrelenting, huge horizontal waves that crested and broke, only to rise again almost immediately. Steve and my birthing coach, Simone, slumped on plastic chairs while searing blades of agony tore me in two. A living, breathing creature was trying to claw its way out of me.
Running Home A Memoir By Katie Arnold
'I can't do this,' I moaned.
'You are doing it,' Simone corrected me. 'The only way out of this is through it.'
I burrowed in. You're stronger than you think you are.
Finally, at the end of the second day, Pippa scrabbled into the world. I held her and looked around the room, marveling at how different it appeared. It was much smaller than I remembered. The walls pressed in, and the bed was narrower and seemed to be oriented in a different direction, though I knew it hadn't moved. I felt like I'd been away on a long journey, traveling vast distances, when in fact I'd been here all along. It was my mind that had left -- it had to, to escape the torments of my body.
Katie Arnold Runner Instagram
I tell myself that if I can withstand 30 hours of labor, then surely I can run for six or seven. This shouldn't be consoling -- almost anything is easier than a day and a half of natural childbirth -- but somehow it is.
Katie Arnold Instagram
Katie Arnold is a contributing editor at Outside Magazine. She has written for The New York Times, Travel + Leisure, Sunset, Runner's World, ESPN, The Magazine, Elle and many other publications.