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347 pages, Kindle Edition
First published October 10, 2019
united we run, divided we stallIn many respects, that was McDougall’s point in telling this off-beat, uplifting, and at-times laugh out loud funny tale. McDougall had intertwined stories about other runner athletes, his Amish neighbors, family and new friends during this year-long recuperation of Sherman the “Wild Thing.” He was gently making his point about the biophilia (“love of living things”) hypothesis that humans are better when the ancient human-animal connection is maintained. He addressed many ways that humans, as creatures that are as social as donkeys, need the bonds of community. His Amish neighbors exemplified this as they had created the full-moon runs through the countryside to enjoy the unspoiled night air (I hope that you weren’t expecting a different type of “full moon!”). His other theme was, of course, the more obvious “motion as medicine” as he wrote about three other young runners whose health (ranging from depression to seizures) improved with the running-with-animals combination.
Dreams are the beginning of every new adventure, and our greatest dreams come from the person right in front of us.