It was probably a crazy idea for me even just to imagine in the first place. That somehow that it might be possible for the race to simply always continue on and that the runners never stop running on the course. It was still safe when I allowed the image to harmlessly percolate around and about within my own imagination. But to then go and write it out publicly like this though is another matter. Because if we accept that some things have to be impossible, than this would surely be one of them. Wouldn’t it?
I apologize should any of you be disturbed or shocked by this idea. I would not blame anyone for dismissing it immediately, for it has to fly in the face of the human body’s physiology, most scientific research on just how much physical, mental, and emotional stress the human organism can cope with. Then in the next breath you dismiss the organizational capacity of this small volunteer run organization that it can somehow maintain manpower and resources to continue in this way forever. And then if you have somehow managed to clamber up this peak of formidable logistics we still haven’t even mentioned the New York weather.
Despite the complete absurdity of it, I know that I am not alone in harboring this phantom vision of the eternal. That somehow it really could happen. That it would one day manifest itself right here on this little New York block. It has come up in private conversation with the runners over the years and danced across our thoughts like a sunbeam skipping tantalizingly just beyond our reach. I would not dare survey most of the 12 here now, as to what they thought, at least not yet.
Perhaps the real source of this fantasy right now is that it may have simply arisen because of the grinding fatigue that comes with enduring the almost biblical past 40 days. There have been too many short sleepless nights and too many long restless days and this could be all some fabrication that has pulled itself out of my imagination.
Yet there is something about it that continues to haunt me. Simply put if we believe that what these 12 runners are doing here now, and have been doing here for 17 years is beyond the borders of impossibility what is to stop us from extending the limits even further. Literally push our conceived boundaries to the brink where limitations and impossibility disappears forever. Sri Chinmoys life and manifestation was always about transcendence in every aspect of our own lives.
Pranjal tells me this morning about his daily running streak which he has maintained now for 5 years. When asked why, “For me it is much easier. When you know you have to run it is much easier to run. There is no excuse, even when you are tired, or sick, or anything. You know that you have to run.” So then I ask Pranjal what he thought of simply running here and never stopping.
“When I was running the first time here I was even praying that the race be extended. To make it a 4800 mile race. I did it this race in 60 days on my first attempt. Still I was thinking to go on. One more month.” He said that he mentioned this to another run who said he must be crazy. They themselves were counting the hours until it finished.
Am I suggesting that one day soon the 3100 mile banner be switched at night and replaced with one that reads FOREVER, ‘No.’ But if we are ever to accept transcendence in even small ways in our own lives, than we have to continue to look at the impossible things and barriers that we have built up around us in a much different way.
Mind, never stop surrendering!
Heart, never stop climbing!
Life, never stop transcending!
Soul, never stop dreaming!
Sri Chinmoy, Twenty-Seven Thousand Aspiration-Plants, Part 76, Agni Press, 1984