“Sri Chinmoy tried to inspire us in many ways, and this was one of them.” Sopan has just read for me the prayer that Sri Chinmoy composed on this day in 2006. Asked why he thinks he wrote these sweet offerings for the runners each day that summer and then on through the entire race in 2007. “He showed his appreciation to the runners in this way, and inspired us to keep moving.”
This amazing young Bulgarian runner has demonstrated a daily mileage consistency like no one else on the course this year. With almost clock like precision he has put in 10 days out of the last 12 in which he has run 113 laps each day.
Sometime late this afternoon he will pass 800 miles and then sometime close to midnight he will call it a day, hopefully with 113 more laps neatly marked on his clip board. Then almost in an instant he will pack his things up and head back to his room. Pedaling through the dark streets towards a room where he will spend a handful of quiet hopefully restful hours. The briefest of sweet breaks in which he will have to share with no one but himself.
He wrote in his daily blog the other day, “Felt like blessing after a difficult humid day. Finally I can catch up a little on sleep as I have been going regularly to bed kind of late.” He like all the runners obviously deserve blessings. Who can really imagine just how hard it is each day being here and doing what they do.
Then try and grasp hold the reality that this same routine will simply replicate itself for many more miles and many more weeks yet to come. The lives of the runners here are almost always in constant movement. Sopan and all the others see in this great journey a goal which will not let them stop or rest until they at last complete the very last step of the 3100 miles.

“The spiritual life is not like the ordinary life. In the ordinary life, if you have come to a particular point and do not want to go further, you can just stay there. But in the spiritual life, if you have come to a point and then do not continue ahead, you cannot remain where you are; ignorance will pull you back. In the ordinary life, if you have come five steps, you can stay there for three months and then, if you want to continue your journey, you can. But in the spiritual life, if after taking five steps you wait for five days, immediately you will be pulled back to your starting point, because ignorance is only one step behind you all the time waiting to grab you. In the spiritual life, my child, you always have to be on the move.
Sri Chinmoy, The Ambition-Deer, Agni Press, 1974