Day 10…The Longest Journey (June 27)

He is a sweet enigma.  Ananda-Lahari, in this his 13 straight appearance at the Self-Transcendence 3100 mile race has spent more time, covered more distance, and smiled more soulfully than any of the other runners he now shares the course with.

When we think of races we usually think of placing, of crossing of finishing line, and the hopes for some, of being able to declare victory.  Ananda-Lahari, though he is built of all the same moving parts as the rest of humanity is simply designed and constructed within to view this race in a much different way.  Certainly some part of him wants always to complete the distance.  Something that has eluded him 7 of 12 times he has come.  Instead he is drawn to do this impossible act in a way that appears to be detached from the obvious results.

He runs as fast he can go, he rarely takes breaks, and stays on the course as late as any of the other runners.  In his absolute devotion to what he does, in his pure and uncomplicated dedication he is satisfied.  Because I believe he sees his spiritual journey as one that is not bound by the sidewalks he circles tirelessly each day.  But instead by the unseen progress he is making within towards a higher goal.  One that has no trophy, no finish line, only his own perfect perfection.

When I ask if he thinks of the loops around the course as repetitive, he says, “It doesn’t look like you are repeating the same thing.  It is like a journey.”  He also feels that the days for him feel longer when he is not running the race.

“I feel every part of the course has some beauty.  It may look very ordinary.  Like just a typical sidewalk and street, and highway, but it is actually very nice here.”  Ananda-Lahari also says he doesn’t miss the course when he is not here.  “Everything has its own time and place.  When I am here I am happy and when I am some place else, I am also happy.”

Only Ashprihanal has run the race more times.  He completed the race 14 times.  “I stayed out until the end but I did not complete the distance.” I point out that regardless he has been here a long time and covered an amazing amount of distance nonetheless.  “I don’t see it like that.  Somehow every year it is like a new experience.  It is a new race and the past is dust.  I don’t think, O I have done it so many times.”

“Every moment is special and every day is like going through many lifetimes.  It is not 52 days, it is like 50 years or more.  I don’t know.”

“Now it is still quiet.  It is just the start of the race.  But after 20 or 30 days it then becomes like immortality.  It is a really long long race.”

Ananda-Lahari says he thinks about his late Spiritual teacher Sri Chinmoy a lot.  “He is my inspiration definitely.  I sometimes imagine the places where I saw him many times over the years around the course.”

“I am trying consciously to meditate or to pray or to chant as much as possible.  Which is almost all the time.  I am very grateful that I have the concentration for that and the eagerness, or enthusiasm.  I am really happy that I am here.”

The longest journey
Is always
The inner journey.
This journey knows no beginning
And no end.

Sri Chinmoy, Seventy-Seven Thousand Service-Trees, part 24, Agni Press, 2002

*Click on the Link Below to see the Rest of the Report*

The Board at the Start of Day 10

The rains start up just before 6

Suhasini getting some water bottles ready

Yolanda getting ready

Harita arrives

Andre getting out of Stutisheel’s back seat

Rupantar does his daily report

Stutisheel checking the lap sheet

Nidhruvi arrives

Vasu arrives

Start Day 10

In an hour the sky starts to clear

Vasu ran 66 miles yesterday

Jadranka cheers as he goes through camp

He now has 616 miles

Getting help from Sasha

Hats off to Nirbhasa

Nirbhasa ran 67 miles.  More than everyone else

He has 596 miles in 2nd place

Nirbhasa is 20 miles behind Vasu

Chatting with Smarana

Flower

Smarana did 62 miles and has 554 miles

Flower

Kaneenika and her rain gear

Kaneenika ran 61 miles

She now has 552 miles

Soon the streets will dry

Legs

Raindrops

This is Harita’s 5th day in a row of running 110 laps or 60 miles

She has 546 miles

Savita works on her feet in camp

Coming up the hill

Yolanda did 59 miles

She has 537 miles.  Mario worked on her feet this morning

Flower

Sergey had his 3rd straight day of 63 miles

He now has 523 miles

Green

Nidhruvi did 48 miles

She now has 516 miles

Stretching

Telling a joke along with Harita to Parvati’s group

Nidhruvi with her helper Devarupi

Raindrops

Andrey and Vasu sharing a phone call

Flower

Andre did 61 miles

He now has 509 miles

“Yes, amazing and true.  I will be the first squirrel to climb higher than the sun.”

Happiness

Sasha reads the Daily Prayer

“This is my first time at the race and it is a very amazing experience for me.  Because I feel Sri Chinmoy’s light and presence so much here.  We work a lot but it gives me a lot of joy and happiness.  Coming here to the race is very different than when I come to celebrations in New York.”

“But I think I can make more progress here because it is different.  It is serving the Supreme in a different way.  I am here usually 7 or 8 hours.  My body may feel tired when I go home but inside I feel very good and very happy.”

Click Below to Play:

poem sasha

Enthusiasm Awakeners

Click to Play:

parvati

God never wants me to celebrate
My journey’s close.
He wants me to enjoy only
My journey’s constant self-transcendence.

4 thoughts on “Day 10…The Longest Journey (June 27)”

  1. One gets the sense that Ananda-Lahari has wisdom in spades – add up all the miles together from the many times in this race and wisdom exceeds the miles themselves. I always look forward to the insights gleaned from his interviews.

  2. Again, thank you for all the interviews! They are all so much helping to feel more what is happening actualy here and it make so much rethinking inspiration to my life.

  3. Thank you so very much for your daily interviews and posts! They contain such richness, wisdom and joy.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *