For several days now there have been bits of grey tape stuck to the sidewalk on all 4 corners of the course. Little arrows have been carefully drawn on them and they are placed a generous distance from the inside corner. They were placed there just to remind Suprabha not to make tight turns. She says, “If you do wide corners it is much better for your hips. Because if you do a sharp corner it is harder for your joints.” It has been just 6 days since Suprabha was teetering on the edge of not being able to complete the race. In that time she has adapted to a whole new strategy in how to do the race and it appears to be paying off. She starts the day with 475 miles to go. Which seems like a lot if you consider it will probably take her another 11 days to complete it. Each day she now only walks and leaves the course early in the evening to help rest her painful hip. But one has to consider as well, that after she crosses the line here this summer she will have run 43,000 miles on this block over 14 years.
She describes her original hip pain as one that slowly became more and more intolerable. She says, “it was going on for a week before it got to the worst point. It was very hard for me to walk around the course. To me that is pretty bad. If you are in a race you just assume you can get around the course.”
Mitch the chiropractor, who came to see her at that time said that when he saw her at the course she could not even stand on one foot. The pain was just too excruciating. The next day x rays were taken and the evaluation given quickly. There was no damage to the bones and what was impressively clear, there was also no evidence of arthritis. Which was a surprise to the radiologist when told that the patient had been running for many years over thousands of miles. The exact cause of her pain was only guessed to be a soft tissue problem. One that could not be irrefutably seen without an MRI. In the meantime another Doctor suggested specific stretching, and more rest. She speculated that most likely Suprabha had some cartilage loss or damage. Suprabha says, “we are really happy that nothing was cracked or broken.”
When asked if she had ever given up hope she looks puzzled at that question. It is almost as though doubt or failure do not exist in her vocabulary or in her make up. Her answer, “I was just trying to figure out the best way to proceed.” She turns to her friend Savita and asks her the same question, “Did I loose hope?” Savita responds with something unexpected. She says, “I think it added spice to the race.” They both laugh and Suprabha answers, “this is the most exciting thing that has ever happened to me.”
Suprabha continues, “Over the years other people have gotten to go off to Doctors. They took time off because they were sick.” They are both laughing at this odd circumstance of having Suprabha for the first time ever leave a race due to injury. Suprabha is content because the worst is clearly over and the goal is now less than 500 miles away. As for sorting out the most challenging experience of her running career and now seeing herself on track to make it to the goal, she says humbly, “It is very nice.”
“Not from darkness shall we proceed towards light,
but from light shall we proceed to more light,
to abundant light,
to infinite light.”