Whenever I try and talk about Ashprihanal, I somehow cannot help but get tripped up by the sheer volume of numbers associated with his accomplishments. Even a casual glimpse at the number of races he has entered, wins, records, mileage, and the totality of a competitive career that appears little dimmed even as he has entered the 3100 mile race for the 15th time at age 48.
What is also incomprehensible is his manner of running. Or perhaps it could be better described as more like flying in a low earth orbit. If you watch for just a moment it might impress you as being awkward. Gaze for just a little longer and you can see the endless poetry of his movements in which no verse is ever repeated.
Yesterday he had a very good day with 129 laps of the course which is a little over 70 miles. Now you runners do your own math. How many of you have ever had even one day of 70 miles?
“Yesterday was good. I finally got rid of my stomach problems.” Ashprihanal says that to put together back to back good days then everything has to be in sync for him. “Sometimes it is one good day, one bad day, then one good day. You don’t really know.”
He says that a big mileage day is not always a good day, “It can be a very tough day. Or it can be a fairly easy day. It is not the laps or the amount of mileage, it is the feeling. The energy you have. That is what matters the most.”
“Your frame of mind is often the most difficult also.” Something, he laughs as he mentions the idea, he feels he has little control over.
We come close to the Enthusiasm Awakeners who are still singing. “They are great. My first half hour you are just starting to wake up.” He says that their cheerful singing can often give him something to look forward to all day. “They come and it gives us enthusiasm and wakes us up. It starts my day.”
“In 2006 Sri Chinmoy used to come by and wrote them new songs every morning, and then he continued into 2007. It was nice.”
Ashprihanal says that to inspire himself he sometimes imagines Sri Chinmoy visiting the race and handing him a prasad treat. Something he did very often over the years and particularly in 2007.