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Path of Three Hundred: Volume 1

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Have you ever reached a point in you life where you just wanted to take off?  Path of Three Hundred, a mind, body and soul book, talks about a transformation of self through a personal account of a sailing adventure. Told from a third-person point of view, this can prove to be an inspiring read, especially for people who have been always confined with what other people dictate they should be doing. Reading this non-fiction book, available for Kindle, hardcover and paperback, will make you realize how important it is to finally break the chain that has always limited the way you enjoy your life.  This short read teaches us about the need to break-free and to create your own story.

194 pages, Kindle Edition

First published May 14, 2015

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About the author

Greg Frucci

3 books21 followers
Greg Frucci is a published Author and Artist in multiple areas. A graduate with honors of Carnegie Mellon University with a Bachelor of Architecture, he started his Architecture career working for a firm in North Carolina, ran his own sole proprietorship for nine years and later moved to San Francisco, CA where he worked in large Architecture firms.
Upon my return from a solo sailing adventure of almost two thousand miles across open ocean where I single-handed a thirty foot sailboat from Wilmington, North Carolina to Bermuda and back, I began writing "Path of Three Hundred". If I had taken a direct route there and back, the trip would have been around fifteen hundred miles, but I took the long way home from Bermuda back to Wilmington sailing halfway to the Bahamas before turning west to Florida, then more north back to North Carolina due to weather conditions at sea.

I felt compelled to write the book because of the transformation of self while being at sea through the physical challenges I faced while alone. There is no place to "pull over" out there. There is no one to take the helm so that I could rest when tired or hungry. Eight days of sailing to get to Bermuda and nine days of sailing back to Wilmington. I experienced storms, the Bermuda Triangle and beautiful wonders of Nature unlike anything I can ever remember...and I want to go back...some day, I will again as I miss the sea even as I write these words.

As I wrote the book, I became a hermit. Going to work at my "normal job", coming home to my sailboat where I live with my dog, Lucky, walking him and writing. Waking up the next day to write and repeat the process...for six months. I began writing the story of the adventure in the first person, however something about the story was a bit dry. I had been reading Paulo Coehlo's books and love the storytelling way in which he writes, so I made a creative decision to write in the third person. I even changed most of the character names including my own. An interesting thing happened in the process. While I was writing what other people were saying about this man, Petah (me), I began to feel those others and become them. Specifically one chapter, "...day Three to the East..." where I was battling an intense Gale Storm, people were freaking out on land as they could see me sail into the middle of the storm...something I did not know at the time. As I wrote what I was told by those others, I could feel their anxiety as I felt the anxiety of the sailor at sea...wild.

I loved the process of writing "Path of Three Hundred" for so many reasons, but the one which sticks in my mind now is being able to keep fresh the images of sailing across the open ocean. The beauty of out there is quite special...a place which will always draw me into it's core.

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