“I feel like there are times where my brain doesn’t fit inside my body. “It gets my brain in a place where I can think,” the 25-year-old said last week from her home in Boston, where she’s a professional runner for the Saucony/Freedom Track Club. It often carries Seidel to her peaceful place. Just slide on a pair of shoes and stretch and go. Running requires so little prep time or equipment or anything else. Back from that, she could settle in and focus and find her voice. Often before drafting an essay for English class, she’d set off on a run. It’s long been that way for the former Notre Dame distance standout.įirst time was in middle school when she battled obsessive compulsive disorder and needed an outlet so she could breathe, could relax, could learn, could live.Ī native of Hartland, Wis., 26 miles west of Milwaukee, Seidel discovered that the best way for her to concentrate was to walk and read a book at the same time. SOUTH BEND - Give Molly Seidel room to run, to race, to get out in open space and all feels right in her world.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |