Sometimes sport stories have a way of inspiring us like nothing else can. An athlete or a team when faced with incredible odds and formidable adversity simply rises up to the challenge and performs something just this side of miraculous. We are instantly inspired and amazed by what we have witnessed and the world around us seems not quite so ordinary. That special things can and do happen and just maybe we might be able to do something great as well.
One of my favorite runners is a man named Johnny Miles who comes from a small town in Nova Scotia Canada. He was a naturally talented runner and his father decided to train him so that he could enter the Boston Marathon. He taught himself how to coach by simply reading about other marathoners, who there weren’t that many of in the 1920’2.
Somehow Johnny’s dad got the idea that he should run 100 miles a week to prepare. In the summers this was easy, running on country roads in and around where he lived. But the marathon is in the Spring time and winters linger cold and late in that part of the world. On his last long training run it had snowed, he once told me, and the roads were impassable. He said his father told him that he should run on the railway tracks instead because they were always plowed.
When he arrives in Boston in 1926 he is just 21 years old. He has no real idea of how to run this thing he has trained so hard for. His Dad says that what he should do is simply follow the favorite in the race named Clarence DeMar who had won the race the 3 previous years. Quite to his surprise however was the appearance of Albin Stenroos from Finland who was also world famous. The local press were ecstatic. Before them they thought was an epic battle between the 2 greatest marathon runners of the day.
Except of course nobody knew this kid from Nova Scotia who simply followed the great ones until they fell apart. To his surprise he was alone in front of the pack, not really knowing what was going to happen next. If in fact the other 2 would somehow come back and challenge him again. Eventually a car came by with some marathon officials who yelled out to him. “You’ve got it, kid, You’ve got it.” Johnny Miles then went on to win the race and set a course record of 2:25.
Nobody probably noticed the moment when it exactly happened. The clipboards of the counters are always kept up to date but there is always a gap between what they say and the numbers which the big board are showing. But sometime yesterday Ashprihanal was passed by Atmavir. The day was also brutally hot for everyone here. It was once again a day when people were trying just to keep moving. Not worrying about how many laps they would make but just how to finish the one in front of them.
What is happening to him now is eerily similar to 2 years ago when his great soaring flight to the finish line was shockingly interrupted. On day 39 he was overwhelmed by this devilish New York weather. After this he then had to battle for another 8 days just to make it to the finish line. An heroic and supreme effort by anybody’s reckoning.
What he faces now though is much more formidable. For what stretches out in front of him is the imposing reality of 870 more miles. Yesterday he walked all day and today he is doing much the same. In the days ahead the weather is supposed to improve and perhaps his wings will come out an he will fly once more.
But this race is always much more about what we don’t see then what we do. For each runner here yesterday the conditions were simply so shocking it was hard really grasp how anyone could go on. Yet Ashprihanal found in his legs and his heart 74 laps. Doing so with a courage and strength that we have grown accustomed to now over the years.
The only thing certain now is with each new lap he walks and each new day at the race, he is entering a new and unfamiliar world within himself. One that is challenging him in a way that Ashprihanal, the flying Finn, has never had to face before. Yet the destination has still not changed despite all this. It has always been and will continue to be his own perfection.

Photo by Bhashwar
Train your mind
For transformation.
Train your heart
For contemplation.
Train your life
For perfection.
Sri Chinmoy, Two God-Amusement-Rivals: My Heart-Song-Beauty And My Life-Dance-Fragrance, Part 13, Agni Press, 1996