Over forty years of running, mostly for competition, putting in thousands of miles, much of it alone, and quite a bit of it in the dark of night or early morning. My friend since 1998, Caytha Jentis pointed out to me, all the time I spent alone running on the roads here and there was a form of therapy. I laughed at Caytha, 'How ridiculous I thought?' She insisted I write down my thoughts that occurred during the miles of running that I put down on the pavement and elsewhere. Caytha cajoled me, "You really need to write a book on what goes through your mind when you run." At this point she had seen my writing, albeit in email form. I thought, 'I could never do what she does. She's talented. She knows how to be social, I certainly don't. I love trees and she appears to be comfortable in a city atmosphere around tons of people. While, I'd prefer to be alone, observing people and nature from afar.' Then one day Caytha gave me the title. She said, "You've got to write this book. You meet so many people. You should call it, 'Therapy on the Run'. You know like, 'Coffee on the Go'? I think it's a great idea. You really have to do it."
Over forty years of running, mostly for competition, putting in thousands of miles, much of it alone, and quite a bit of it in the dark of night or early morning. My friend since 1998, Caytha Jentis pointed out to me, all the time I spent alone running on the roads here and there was a form of therapy. I laughed at Caytha, 'How ridiculous I thought?' She insisted I write down my thoughts that occurred during the miles of running that I put down on the pavement and elsewhere. Caytha cajoled me, "You really need to write a book on what goes through your mind when you run." At this point she had seen my writing, albeit in email form. I thought, 'I could never do what she does. She's talented. She knows how to be social, I certainly don't. I love trees and she appears to be comfortable in a city atmosphere around tons of people. While, I'd prefer to be alone, observing people and nature from afar.' Then one day Caytha gave me the title. She said, "You've got to write this book. You meet so many people. You should call it, 'Therapy on the Run'. You know like, 'Coffee on the Go'? I think it's a great idea. You really have to do it."
Jody-Lynn Reicher resides in Northern Bergen County New Jersey with her husband of nearly now thirty-four years and their two daughters. Jody-Lynn has a background in the military (USMC), also working in the financial and accounting fields in corporate environments for ten years before becoming Licensed Massage Therapist and ART practitioner for medical purposes. She started her therapy practice nearly twenty-six years ago. Recently, she began teaching part-time, private, self-defense lessons for teenage girls and women. As this book goes to press, she currently is trained by Boxing trainer, Mr. Steve Bratter out of The YESS Barbell and Boxing Gym. Jody-Lynn is a three time Badwater Ultra Finisher (2002,2004, and 2005), and still holds the North American Women's 24 Hour Treadmill Record, as this book goes to press, she's third in the world for that same distance. She has run nearly 500 events of middle distance, long distance, marathon distance (forty-one), and ultra-distance (forty-one). She has ground fought ninety-six matches, and fought nineteen stand up matches. She's done several speeches on life's lessons and struggles, physiology, being a veteran, and athletics. She is the author of "The Endurance Athlete's Guide to Nutrition" (2006), soon to be revised. "Reaching God's Perfection...Stories of Gratefulness" (2014), "Priceless in Changsha" (2017), "Not Exactly Don Juan...and the Liberated Woman" (2017). Her upcoming titles of her next Books: "Two Girls Talking, and God Listening In", "Therapy in the Fight", "Therapy in the Race", "How to Ruin a Pearl" (a novel), "Journey On Babe...How to Liberate a Woman", and "Writes of Passages, Stories in Prose".
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