When Surasa first entered the 3100 mile race in 2010 it was a monumental moment. The previous year the great Suprabha Beckjord had run the race for the last time. From its inception in 1997 no other girl had even attempted to run the race prior to Surasa’s entrance in the 13th running of the race. But Surasa had an extraordinary history of distance running reaching back nearly 20 years. Even at age 51 she was not fearful of trying to run the longest race in the world.
But this race is like no other and in her valiant effort that year she completed 2760 miles. Of course the door now was wide open. So Surasa came back again the following year, once again the only female entrant, but this time she had found what was needed to complete the race before the cutoff. She finished in 53 days, 15 hours.
Not content with her achievement in 2011, she came back once again in 2013 and had an even better race. She came in 5th overall and completed the distance in 50 days and 4 hours. At this time she also set the record for being the oldest runner to complete the race. A record that lasted until last year, when William Sichel ran at 60 years of age.
When I welcomed her back to the race this year, she said, “I am just happy and grateful to be here again.”
Surasa describes her inspiration to come and do the race as something she clearly experiences within herself. Last year, “I had the feeling that it was too much. I cannot do it. I also thought that it was good to have one year in between. I wanted to do it but at the very end I thought it was too much.”
“On one hand you are sad that you cannot do it but on the other side you are wise, and then you are grateful that you didn’t do it.”
As for being here this year. “It is such an opportunity to do something that the Supreme wants you to do. It is such a chance, and I am happy and grateful for this opportunity. I try to never forget to be grateful to have this opportunity to run.”
Ashprihanal is running the race for the 13th time but she does not see such a thing happening for her. “I will be over 70. I started this race to late. I was already over 50.”
She says that in her previous races here she always thinks each one will be her last. “Then after the race I get so inspired to do it again.”
Surasa also describes how she tries deliberately does not set goals for herself. “Of course I want to try my best.”
“You are never disappointed if you never set a goal. This is what happened in each of my races that I did. I was always satisfied, and was always happy with the mileage, so I was not disappointed that I didn’t set a goal.”
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