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With the tension of the riveting, seminal track race embedded in
its narrative, Relax and Go: On Running and Surviving Parental
Trauma is the inspirational response of a father to his children's
traumas. Duke University's most valuable cross country runner of
1987 serendipitously re-encounters and marries his childhood
sweetheart on his way to living the American dream only to learn
that the setbacks he faced as a successful athlete are trivial
compared to the emotional toil of having two of his three children
diagnosed with diabetes-one of whom was already struggling with
significant learning differences. While Relax and Go will swiftly
engage any parent whose child is suddenly diagnosed with a serious
condition, disability, or even a lesser trauma, it possesses the
fleshy characters of quality literary fiction. The infant boy with
reflux becomes the four year old with juvenile diabetes, but even
after his diagnosis with asthma and an extended recovery process
from multiple concussions, he retains his indomitable spirit and
disarming sense of humor. The story of the learning different
youngest child and her struggles with dyslexia, ADHD, processing
and anxiety disorders, and eventual juvenile diabetes diagnosis is
immediately alarming: "I am stupid. I am ugly." Her moving story is
heartbreaking as she thoughtfully exclaims, "God made a mistake.
Only Ben was supposed to get diabetes." Yet, she is triumphant as
she learns to read and understand herself: ." . . Mommy and Daddy
were right. I am not ugly and I am not stupid." The self-described
"Oreo filling" middle child could have been easily crushed by the
extraordinary attention necessarily dedicated to her "top and
bottom" siblings, but like that cookie's center, she cements the
parts with her strength. She also endures the effects of
concussions as a pre and young teen, but her second occurrence
receives characteristically short attention as her little sister is
soon diagnosed with diabetes. It would be understandable for her to
be resentful. Instead, she merely wishes that she could be a better
sister. The self-possessed narrator who grows through his
struggles, learning how much is beyond his control, and how to
treasure the rewards of investing in the journey. As a child, he
must navigate his own course through the landmines of his own
parents' crumbling marriage.
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