“I was the youngest to attempt and complete the race in 2005.” That year when Sopan first came here to run the 3100 mile race he was only 24 years old. I ask him what he remembers about himself at that time, so many years and miles ago. He laughs at just the thought of this absurd question. “No really. After my first race I changed so much. I cannot remember. My first race was such a huge transformation for me.”
So I ask, over these past 8 years what then has he become. His simple answer, “I hope better.”
The news that someone has become a better person simply isn’t that interesting to traditional media. Do some terrible act and a throng of journalists will be at your door in an instant. There are times when I watch people reading newspapers where I work and you can see them getting visibly more miserable as they consume one ugly story after the next.
We seem to be almost continually bombarded by bad news from around the world, accompanied as well by shocking pictures of these same events. Sometimes you can get the impression by reading the news that nothing beautiful or inspiring is happening anywhere in this world of ours. Which is really not true of course. The soulful beautiful things are simply hard to find and perhaps just a little more difficult to tell as well.
Quite a few people over the last week have commented that they have been inspired by the 3100 mile race. From remarks printed and otherwise communicated it is clear that there are many people around the world who do see and feel that something soulful and significant is happening right now on a hard cement block in Queens.
Savadhara recently said, “Utpal, please, say every runner that in faraway Ukraine and Russia their friends are following them every step. We pray for them and we are very grateful.”
Francesco wrote, “Today I had a day so hard that all the time I imagined if I could be a runner in the 3100 mile race that runs between peace and harmony,
suffering outside, but with so much joy on the inner level.”
Laura from Texas says, “Every year since 2006 I have been peeking in on this race and love seeing the regulars come back and new ones succeed.”
These comments and many more that I have received over the last week have helped me to see as well just how this 3100 mile race does not just exist on this fragment of a New York street. That the course does not just endlessly circle one short half mile strip of concrete.
In many ways it also exists in the thoughts and feelings of all those who can identify with the great journey that is continually taking place here and over the course of the long hot summer ahead. That at its finest moments, the race can connect and inspire the hearts of all those who are reaching forward towards their own self transcendence.

Do not avoid
But transform
The things that need
Transformation.
Sri Chinmoy, Twenty-Seven Thousand Aspiration-Plants, Part 77, Agni Press, 1984