University Press of America
Pages: 164
Trim: 6 x 9⅛
978-0-7618-4795-3 • Paperback • September 2009 • $48.99 • (£38.00)
978-0-7618-4796-0 • eBook • September 2009 • $46.50 • (£36.00)
Jay Kimiecik, PhD, is a professor at Miami University (Oxford, Ohio) and co-founder of the Well-Being Way. He is the author of The Intrinsic Exerciser: Discovering the Joy of Exercise and Y Personal Fitness Program (YPFP) for the YMCA, used in over 500 YMCAs in North America.
Doug Newburg, PhD, is the co-founder of Powered by Feel. He has interviewed and worked with hundreds of world-class performers in sports, business, aeronautics, the military, and education. He is the author of The Most Important Lesson No One Ever Taught Me, A Pearl's Promise, and Powered By Feel. Newburg lives in Colorado and Florida, continuing to be active by bicycling and rollerblading.
Chapter 1 Illustrations
Chapter 2 Foreword
Chapter 3 Introduction
Part 4 WARMUP
Chapter 5 The Big Idea
Chapter 6 The Adventure of Feeling Alive Begins
Part 7 LAP 1: ENGAGING IN PREPARATION
Chapter 8 1. The Little Voice of Feel
Chapter 9 2. Why Athlete
Chapter 10 3. The Weakest Link
Chapter 11 4. Paying Attention in Preparation
Chapter 12 5. Water World
Chapter 13 6. Getting to the Core of the Matter
Chapter 14 7. I am Lady Hear Me Roar
Part 15 LAP 2: EMBRACING PAIN AND DISCOMFORT
Chapter 16 8. The Summer of Pain
Chapter 17 9. The Feel
Chapter 18 10. Easy Speed
Chapter 19 11. The Feel Wakes Up After Forty Years
Chapter 20 12. Breakthrough at the Brewery
Chapter 21 13. I am Superman and I Can Do Anything
Part 22 LAP 3: SLAYING DRAGONS
Chapter 23 14. Testing, Testing
Chapter 24 15. The Muscles at the Heart of It All
Chapter 25 16. Then and Now
Chapter 26 17. Back in the Rehab Saddle Again
Chapter 27 18. Desire Greater Than Fear
Chapter 28 19. My Longaberger Mile
Chapter 29 20. Waiting for Spring
Chapter 30 21. Living on the Side of the Mountain
Part 31 BELL LAP: TRANSFORMING TO MYSELF
Chapter 32 22. Shock the System
Chapter 33 23. The Joy of Deliberate Practice
Chapter 34 24. A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to, During, and After the Race
Chapter 35 25. Wanted Dead or Alive
Chapter 36 26. Aligning Goals with a Dream
Chapter 37 27. Training Tracks
Chapter 38 28. Track Town USA
Chapter 39 Acknowledgements
Chapter 40 References
Chapter 41 About the Authors
A magical memoir of a masters athlete in search of his inner track star…expertly weaves in state-of-the-sport research.
— Ken Stone, founder and co-webmaster of masterstrack.com
The ultimate in passion is to try to be the best that you can be, and in running there is no better metaphor. And there is no better book I have read that delves as deeply into this relationship than Runner as Hero.
— Bernd Heinrich, professor emeritus of biology, University of Vermont, ultramarathoner and author of Why We Run
Rules that pertain to running in Runner As Hero apply to other activities. This caulks an important void and makes it much more than a book about running.
— Bob Roncker, owner, Bob Roncker's Running Spot, runner for over 50 years
A comfortable and "likeable" exchange…put[s] emotional and spiritual meaning to the physical act of running; and…liberates our greatest and most authentic human potential.
— Molly Barker, MSW, founder and vision keeper, Girls on the Run International
[A] marvelous "Everyman" book…readers get plenty of philosophy, mixed with daily running challenges, to tug us along.
— Amby Burfoot, 1968 Boston Marathon winner; editor-at-large, Runner's World
The ultimate in passion is to try to be the best that you can be, and in running there is no better metaphor. And there is no better book I have read that delves as deeply into this relationship than Runner as Hero.
— Bernd Heinrich, professor emeritus of biology, University of Vermont, ultramarathoner and author of Why We Run