“I am just trying to survive.” Pushkar has clearly been shaken by the conditions on the road here yesterday. They are dramatic words but also it is a dramatic time right now here at the race. It is almost as though it has only just begun and the weather has erupted with its own spicy brand of fiery New York weather hell. Day 4 will likely not be long remembered as when the race teetered on the precipice of a weather catastrophe, because that dubious distinction has already been won hands down last year when the weather got so hot that the race was forced to shut down for a day. But June 20 was a bad day and today, June 21 just might prove to be its equal in ferocity.
What makes this weather situation so acutely trying is that it is in the first week that the runners try and attain their most efficient rhythm and flow. Tune their bodies to the pounding here, and adjust all their habits and schedules that make their overall daily running performance operate smoothly.
Right now that is an impossible dream, one that has evaporated in a hissing cloud of steam. Just drinking enough water and digging up the strength and resolve to go on one lap more is about all they have. Every one of the runners save one had their mileage totals drop significantly yesterday on day 4. The lone runner who actually did better was Arpan who miraculously discovered that a daily massage would keep him moving better.
We all cannot help but be concerned and sympathetic for the runners on days such as this. Locally today it became a regular and almost worn out phrase as so many people grumbled about how hot it is and than added, “yeah, but imagine how the runners feel.” On a practical level it would be grim to imagine the weather clamping down upon us for many many more days when there are still thousands of miles yet to run.
Most certainly it won’t, and likely by Monday the world will push us back into a more sympathetic and typical weather pattern. Yet in the great scheme of things positive and powerful inner experiences will continue to happen here no matter the what the weather decides to serve. The numbers will come and go like the birds that flit on and off the fence and hop from one branch to the other.
The transformation of each and every runner has already begun here in the deep and unfathomable depths of their hearts. Happening invisibly to most of the by-standing world but also richly revealing itself to the one for whom the transformation is gradually unfolding.
No one can divine or formulate the elixir of experience that will bring about our inevitable self transcendence and transformation. Whether it be peace or or be pain, or any of the other innumerable experiences of the heart and soul. The most important thing is to at least begin the inner race. For without that the goal will never be reached and won.
“This survival of the fittest.”
HERBERT SPENCER
Spencer referred to the struggle to survive in the material life. But how to be the fittest in the spiritual life? By making oneself a conscious instrument of God’s Vision and Will.
Sri Chinmoy, Philosopher-Thinkers: The Power-Towers Of The Mind And Poet-Seers: The Fragrance-Hours Of The Heart In The West, Agni Press, 1998.