“I am good. A little bit slower this morning. I just go without ever pace I am able to do. The main thing is to just go forward.”
Nirbhasa says this with the same cheerful lightness and enthusiasm that has categorized everything he has said and done for more than 11 days. In that period he has run further in time and longer in distance, than this 35 year old jack of all trades from Ireland has ever done before in his life. He, like all the runners in the 3100 mile race though still have a very very long way yet to go.
Last night when he left the course to grab a few hours of sleep he went home on his bicycle with the scoreboard showing 710 miles beside his name. His previous best of 702 had been accomplished more than a year ago at the 10 day race in Fushing Meadow.
Nirbhasa calls pushing beyond his previous marks of 10 days and 702 miles as, “they are nice little milestones along the way.”
“The main thing is to stay in the moment. At this stage it is still quite early. If you think about what you have left to do. It is kind of too much.”
I mention to Nirbhasa that both he and Kaneenika are venturing into new realms running the 3100 for the first time. The two of them had run the 10 day race for a few years.
“It is a completely different race. The surface is one thing. On the very rare occasions when we have to go out onto the road here. If feels like you are running on rubber. The concrete here is very unforgiving.”

“The format is also a lot different. You have to condense all your running into this 18 hour time frame. 10 days you can kind of get your head around it. When you are going to start and when you are going to finish. A race like this you can’t think too much about the finish line you just have to keep going. You have to take it day by day.”
“In general I am having a nice experience. I am not really worried too much about mileage. I am going forward at whatever pace I can and somehow the miles come. You just have to stay grateful and happy the miles kind of rack up almost by themselves.”
“In the first 2 or 3 weeks you are still kind of in the training wheel stage. It is important not to push too hard, not to blow a tire.”
“I certainly have targets and goals and little kind of way marks for achieving them. Essentially you have to make sure that your own inner attitude is up to shape. If that is taken care of then that means you can stay out here and let the miles happen.”

Nirbhasa also says that he feels aware of his late spiritual teacher Sri Chinmoy, the founder of the 3100 mile race, in a very tangible way at the race.
“Not only around the course but also in the whole organization, that is set up around the race. It is very much like a family feeling. Everybody is kind of looking out for each other. The kitchen staff are doing such a wonderful job. I think they are working harder than we do, to make everything ready. There is such an atmosphere of self giving, of concern. These things you feel really permeate the race.”
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