Girls on Track: A Parent's Guide to Inspiring Our Daughters to Achieve a Lifetime of Self-Esteem and Respect
By (Author) Molly Barker
Random House USA Inc
Ballantine Books Inc.
15th March 2004
United States
General
Non Fiction
Child care and upbringing: advice for parents
155.533
Paperback
256
Width 142mm, Height 211mm, Spine 15mm
238g
During adolescence, if a girl isn't careful, she can fall into a trap called the Girl Box-a place where the way she looks is more important than who she is, where having a boyfriend is worth giving up a piece of her identity. This is a very serious problem, one that can lead to substance abuse, eating disorders, early sexual contact, and depression. Now Molly Barker, founder of the dynamic Girls on the Run exercise program, has created a ten-week self-esteem-building plan that will instill resiliency in young girls and enhance their emotional, social, physical, mental, and spiritual health. The activities and lessons are designed for parents and girls to do together and include
If you buy one book on parenting, make it this invaluable guide to building self-confidence, resiliency, and an independent, integrated life in our girls.
CELIA STRAUS, author of Prayers on My Pillow and
The Mother-Daughter Circle
A brilliant and effective tool that works for all kinds of girls . . . A much-needed resource that helps girls and makes the world better for girls and boys.
JOE KELLY, president of Dads and Daughters
Author of Dads and Daughters:
How to Inspire, Understand, and Support Your Daughter When Shes
Growing Up So Fast
Intertwining running tips with psychological exercises on beauty, gossip, and emotion, Molly Barker reminds us all of the connections between the outer and the inner girl. In doing so, running becomes a metaphor, not of escape, but of strength, promise, and focus.
SHARON LAMB, author of The Secret Lives of Girls
Molly Barker, MSW, a four-time Hawaii Ironman triathlete, founded Girls on the Runin Charlotte, North Carolina, in 1996. Molly began running at the age of 15-an age when she found herself stuck in the Girl Box, when only girls who were a certain size with a certain beauty were popular. Molly kept running and years later, on July 7, 1993, she took off on a sunset run and found the inspiration that grew into Girls on the Run. Using her background in counseling and teaching and her personal recovery from alcoholism, along with research on adolescent issues, she developed the earliest version of the curriculum with the help of 13 intrepid girls at Charlotte Country Day School. The program grew and today Molly oversees more than 20,000 girls who participate in GOTR programs across the country. In 1998,Runner's Worldawarded Molly its Golden Shoe Award for contributions to the community through running. Her favorite times remain the ones she spends with her own daughter and her son at their home in Charlotte, North Carolina.