“Today I had a very good meditation and I am very happy. It was a regular half an hour but on the run. It was amazing I never had it before.” Sarvagata is still very much glowing from the experience. The morning is perfectly still and the dim glistening brightness of dawn is now opening up to reveal a full wide sun bright morning. I feel very much that I have somehow come along at just the moment when the door to his heart is wide open and I have stepped by chance into some sacred still place within him.
Sarvagata is well into his 4th day of running. In about another hours time he will make one small step up the mileage ladder and complete his first 200 miles. Perhaps by tomorrow he will make 300 miles and on countless other long days ahead the numbers and digits will gradually stretch further across the board beside his name. None of those statistics however will mean as much to him as those precious moments of meditation.
Experiences that do not follow any timetable that we can measure and certainly seem both perfect and ironic at the same time. Perfect, because runners like Sarvagata have come specifically to the self transcendence race to open a pathway to reveal the divine within himself. And yet it is ironic undertaking as well. For this is not some remote silent cave in which the search for peace and transcendence is sought out. Instead it is a sometime raucous public place, in which these 12 runners have embarked upon one of the most difficult tasks in all creation.
This is the 3rd summer Sarvagata has spent here in the eternal quest for Self transcendence. On his first year here, almost from his first day on the course, he quickly moved into an almost continuous trance like mode of running. Almost detached from the world around him and devoted himself fully to the road and task in front of him.
Quite often his face seemed twisted in a painful grimace and when asked about this he said it was not pain at all that sharpened the features of his face, it was instead that he was crying out for the Supreme, and for that alone. He ended up that year winning the race.
Then last year the outer experience shifted dramatically. He was not the lonely monk lost in his solo journey into the beyond. He found himself having to confront the world around him, he said. It was for him a blend of the inner truth that he sought and the outer reality that he could not escape from.
It was an experience for him in which he could no longer simply exist in the tranquility and solitude of his inner self. Instead he had to accept and be part of the outer world in a way he had not been required to do in his first year of running here.
Yet it was in this face to face experience with the world that he also gathered strength and a better understanding of how the outer and inner can and must exist simultaneously. That he could still continue to search for God within, but he also had to accept that God had to be found and appreciated in the world around him as well.
He gently laughs as he talks about the meditation experience he has just had. He jokes, “It was so nice. You should try it.”

Question: Since God is within us and we know that one day we will realise God, why is it necessary to practise Yoga?
Sri Chinmoy: One day we shall realise everything which is natural. God is natural and so naturally we shall realise Him. That is true, but it means that we shall have to wait for Eternity. God has given us a conscious mind and conscious aspiration. If we don’t want to use our conscious aspiration, then we can wait. God is not compelling us or forcing us. We can sleep if we want to. But if we consciously pray and meditate, then we will go faster. Everybody will reach the Goal, but he who sleeps will not reach the Goal as fast as he who is running. One day everybody will realise God because in God’s Cosmic Vision, He will never allow anyone to remain unrealised. But it will take a very long time. Again, if we want to wait, no harm; we can wait.
Sri Chinmoy, Flame Waves, Part 12, Agni Press, 1978