About The Author
Ray Terry is a small business and nonprofit development consultant operating out of Severna
Park, MD. After high school and college Ray enlisted in the U.S. Navy's Nuclear Program where he served as an Electrician's Mate. Next, Ray began a long career in sales and marketing starting as a sales manager at a large furniture chain, training others and writing manuals. The knowledge gained there led Ray to a job with a downtown redevelopment firm out of Annapolis, MD where he was a community marketing liaison on the redevelopment of downtown Tampa, FL. In 2009 he noticed he was having problems walking and sitting correctly, but assumed he was just stiff from lack of exercise and sitting most of the day at work. These symptoms only became worse over the next decade, despite Ray becoming more active outdoors and spending less time seated.
By 2018 Ray needed a cane to walk. He was 49 years old, way too young. Even then, he blamed the dysfunction on possible traumatic injuries received in the past. He now believes that turns out to be only partially true. While working with a group of Performance trainers known as The FootDoctor Sports he began studying, and attending training, therapy, and neuroscience conferences, all while seeking knowledge from professionals in a variety of specializations and trying to find solutions to his dysfunctions. Dysfunctions are simply deviations from what are considered normal behaviors. Most of them occur over time. The more time spent behaving dysfunctionally, the more dysfunctional the behaviors in the future. He concluded that for most of his life, he had been practicing to move incorrectly and he wanted to create a program for kids so they didn't have to learn the hard way like he did. He wanted all kids to move as athletically as possible from a young age. He wanted all kids to achieve Young Athletic Movement.
In 2023, Ray started the children's book publishing company Young Athletic Movement which released its first title "How We Move" in November 2023. The books in the Young Athletic Movement program are written to help children develop good movement habits at a young age ( between the ages of 2 and 6) which will help them be more athletic and mitigate the development of chronic pain later in life.
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