2017-9-6 23:43
peisingk
the woods therising sun
“I was bulimic in college and had a terrible self-image, until I found myself out here,” Jenni said.
She came as a summer volunteer, and was immediately loaded with a lumberjack saw and twoweeks of food and pointed toward the backcountry to go clear trails. She nearly buckled under theweight of the backpack, but she kept her doubts to herself and set off, alone, into the woods [url=http://liujingtao.i-ra.jp/e1050362.html][color=#333333]with her, [/color][/url][url=https://wuhujian202.joomla.com/2-uncategorised/41-2017-09-06-02-58-39][color=#333333]he would [/color][/url][url=http://blog.livedoor.jp/fiyblue/archives/18434479.html][color=#333333]sanction [/color][/url]
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At dawn, she’d pull on sneakers and nothing else, then set off for long runs through warming her naked body. “I’d be out here for weeks at a time by myself,” Jenniexplained. “No one could see me, so I’d just go and go and go. It was the most fantastic feelingyou can imagine.” She didn’t need a watch or a route; she judged her speed by the tickle of windon her skin, and kept racing along the pine-needled trails until her legs and lungs begged her tohead back to camp.
Jenni has been hard-core ever since, running long miles even when Idaho is blanketed by snow.