On the second day of his visit we had a Sri Chinmoy Run. The disciples had found a very beautiful course around a lake with two or three small loops and one big loop. Zatopek was supposed to start the race. He was so enthusiastic, as if he were running himself. He called out, “Where is the gun?” He was screaming, “No gun? No gun?”
We said, “We don’t use a gun.”
Then his wife said, “You don’t need a gun.”
When his wife said that, Zatopek said, “All right, I will clap.”
The race was to start on a small bridge. There were a little over two hundred people on the bridge. They were standing under a big banner saying “Sri Chinmoy Lauf.” “Lauf” means race. Zatopek was standing on one side. He started the race by saying something in German, ending with a final clap. When he clapped, everybody clapped, and the race started.
All the London disciples — even elderly women — were running. Our very good runners were also there. Among the disciples, Sundar came in first and then Janaka. But they were defeated by local Swiss boys. I was not feeling well and was running last, behind everybody.
When I ran along the small loops, Zatopek was so excited. He was clapping like anything. His wife stood up also and was clapping and clapping, although I was running behind everybody.
Some of the girls who are useless runners kept taking short cuts at the places where the monitors where directing them around the loops. I told them later that they were all rogues. If they were supposed to run around someone who was standing in one place, instead they cut across. They saved fifty or seventy metres on four occasions. I was so disgusted. On one loop, at least two hundred metres they didn’t run. They took a short cut. What were they doing? Just because they were third class runners, they felt nobody would pay any attention.
When it was over, Zatopek gave the prizes. I was so embarrassed. The first, second and third prize trophies were of the same size, with the same figure. Only it was mentioned on the trophy, “first” or “second” or “third.” I said, “How can it be?”
John announced the winner’s name and handed the trophy to Zatopek, who handed it to the person. To each person who came up for a trophy, Zatopek had something encouraging to say. He was very, very nice. There were also health food prizes — honey and other things — for the winners. Zatopek was so happy to see that we had health food for the winners. After he gave each person his trophy, he pointed to the health food so happily and said, “Take this. You select.”
I thanked both Zatopek and his wife, and Zatopek spoke, appreciating us. Then he came up to me and grabbed my hand and said, “Our Guru, this is the best.” That was his comment. The race and the atmosphere — everything — pleased him, so he said, “Our Guru, this is the best.”
The Mayor of Zurich, who comes from Canada, sent his assistant to honour me. He came with a proclamation and he spoke so highly of me for about seven or eight minutes. All of a sudden, his wife, who was very tall — much taller than her husband — came and gave me a huge bouquet. She was smiling at me. The husband said, “She wants to offer you this bouquet.” So I took it and I thanked her.
RB 291. 20 June 1980↩
Once upon a time I was first — for 16 years. But here, there was at least a 50-metre gap between the first runner and me. The audience was enjoying the fact that there was such a gap between us.
On the board it was mentioned, “Sri Chinmoy, Puerto Rico.” The Puerto Rican disciples were so delighted. I had said that I was not going to run the 400-metre dash, but they didn’t listen. My name still appeared on the board: “Sri Chinmoy, Puerto Rico.”
RB 292. September 1980↩
Then I recognised him. He was in the Randall’s Island race in New York City. I had told Danny to videotape him. I said, “Yes, you ran extremely well. I was far, far behind.” He is national champion in his age category. He was so happy to see me. He couldn’t believe that I was in Puerto Rico. At Randall’s island he ran a 2:10 and my timing was three minutes. But in India in the 800 metres I had stood first.
In half an hour again he came up to me just to chat. In the Pan American Games he defeated everyone in the 800, but in the 100 he didn’t get a place. So, he said nice things and I said nice things.
RB 293. September 1980↩
So I gave it to her. Then there was an announcement that the plane would be delayed for twenty minutes. When I went to the stewardess to get some books out of the bag, a tall man came and stood in front of me and said, “Master, Master, why didn’t you run yesterday in the half-marathon?”
I said, “I couldn’t do the 400-metre dash. How could I have done the half-marathon?”
He said, “Your races are so good because they are held early in the morning. I always enter your races. Early in the morning I run.”
There the half-marathon was held at three-thirty in the afternoon, so he didn’t run. And he is Puerto Rican! Puerto Ricans are accustomed to that kind of heat.
So you see, if you start races early in the morning, there will be at least one person who will be happy and grateful.
He said, “Your students, your disciples, are so good.”
Another stewardess happened to be there and she said, “Because the Master is good, the disciples are good.” Then she said, “Master, I have been to your meetings quite a few times, but now it is different. At the meditations you are very distant. It is good, but you are somewhere else. Now you are talking.”
I said, “At that time I meditate.”
She said, “Yes, that’s why you are so distant.”
RB 294. September 1980↩
RB 295. 26 March 1981↩
RB 296. 27 March 1981↩
RB 297. 28 March 1981↩
RB 298. 28 March 1981↩
In the last race, as I was approaching the turnaround point I saw Karabi and Cathy. They were only twenty metres ahead of me. It was tempting to try to catch them! But it’s easy to forget that you have to run another twenty metres before you even reach the turnaround!
Then I was going back on one side and Hashi was coming on the other side. My ego went so high! I also saw Nayana and a few others behind me. Then I saw Chameli very far behind. I said, “You! In the 26-mile New York Marathon, you smiled at me and after 17 miles you went ahead of me.” She was smiling in this race also.
For most of the race I was a little ahead of Gayatri. Because of my fever I never had any energy. When Gayatri went ahead of me, I didn’t have any power left. I made a sincere surrender to her.
RB 299. April 1981↩
Then a black woman came up to me and said, “Sri Chinmoy, do you have the time?” I could not tell her the time. I was wearing my yellow stopwatch which does not have the regular time. So she smiled at me.
RB 300. April 1981↩
At first I thought, “How am I going to remember who he is, even though I am looking at him?” Then I remembered that his name was John Graham. He was formerly with the U.S. Mission to the United Nations. It was he who wrote a letter to the U.S. State Department arranging for my talk there last year, and I thanked him deeply.
He said, “I was glad to be of help to you.” He told me his timing for the seven-mile race. It was about an eight-minute pace. My timing is better for seven miles, but I didn’t tell him.
Before he left the U.S. Mission, I gave him an interview after one of our meetings at the United Nations. During the interview he had asked me how he could bring forward and utilise his power. So I had given him an answer and he had remembered it. He had even memorised some of my words and he quoted them to me.
After he left the U.N. he went to India to give lectures on “How to change the world.” He was at Gandhi’s ashram. For seventeen years he has been in politics. Now he has learned about spirituality and he is a real seeker. Still he is giving lectures. His theme is always “How to change the world.”
RB 301. 4 April 1981↩
I said, “I am so proud of you.”
He said, “I am getting a trophy, but I have to wait an hour for it.”
I told him, “You should wait for it.”
RB 302. 4 April 1981↩
RB 303. 4 April 1981↩
I wish to say that people who aspire will never become old. They will always remain children in the Heart of our Beloved Supreme.
RB 304. 7 April 1981↩
Our competition was going on very nicely. After two miles I left the course and about four or five minutes later I came back. I didn’t see the older Japanese lady running. I knew she had gone quite far ahead. I ran and ran very fast and finally I saw her again and started running with her. From time to time she gave me a good smile. She was very old and very short. She was the right person for me to run with! She was drinking after practically every mile, but I didn’t drink at all.
RB 305. 21 April 1981↩
One gentleman said to me, “Friend, my friend, don’t give up!”
At one point I was breathing heavily. A little boy came up to me with a few pieces of orange. Usually I don’t take oranges, but the little boy was so kind, so I took a piece of orange from him. Then he said, “Don’t die, don’t die!”
RB 306. 21 April 1981↩
RB 307. 21 April 1981↩
RB 308. 3 May 1981↩
RB 309. 3 May 1981↩
RB 310. 3 May 1981↩
RB 311. 3 May 1981↩
Then Gary Muhrcke, the winner of the first New York Marathon, came up to me and said, “I'm sure many people are running from your club.”
I said, “Yes, many, many.”
Then Norb Sanders came up. I didn’t recognise him; he has grown a beard now. He was asking me about my knee pain.
RB 312. 3 May 1981↩
I ran about twenty blocks to a place that I later found out was only two or three blocks away from the hotel. Unfortunately, when I asked a young boy where the Holiday Inn was, he told me it was in exactly the opposite direction. Instead of telling me it was two blocks in one direction, he turned the other way and said, “Run that way. Go only a couple of blocks — two or three more — and then you will find it.” He even pointed the way with his finger.
I ran two or three, then six or seven blocks and still I didn’t see the hotel. Finally, I approached someone else and said, “Somebody told me that the Holiday Inn was only two blocks in this direction.”
The man said, “Not this direction. It is in the other direction. Turn around and go the other way.”
I said to myself, “Whom to believe?” The first time, when I was following the young boy’s instructions, I was having no doubts. But by this time real doubt had started. O God, what could I do? When one is a stranger, one has to believe in these people. Finally I said, “All right.” So I covered six or seven blocks in the other direction, and finally I found the Holiday Inn.
RB 313. 11 May 1981↩
There were about twenty-five runners in the race. Four girls who were running started to pass me. I said, “I have no more strength to run. I preach all the time ‘surrender, surrender, surrender’ to my disciples. Now God wants me to practise it.” O God, one, two, three, four — the girls all went ahead of me. Then, after one mile, one by one I caught three of them. But one girl was still ahead of me. After a mile and a half, I had absolutely no energy left. I started walking very nicely and the girls whom I had passed went ahead. I said, “Oh, now I am practising and practising. Not only do I preach surrender but I practise it also.”
A young man, a new disciple who still had long hair and a moustache, came up to me near the end of the race and said, “Guru, I want to run with you because I want peace. I am getting so much peace from you.”
I thought, “Oh, he is getting peace and I am dying.”
So, near the finish line, when I started walking, he also started walking. Then about a hundred metres from the end I told him, “Now, please, you go and run. Finish it running.” So he completed the two-mile race running.
RB 314. 11 May 1981↩
I saw a man with a dog near the start of the race and I said to him, “Excuse me, can you tell me how many miles they are going to run? I see there is going to be a race.”
The man said, “I don’t understand your English!” in a very abrupt way.
Immediately I saw that he was an American. I asked, “Where do you come from?”
He answered, “I come from Texas. Where do you come from?”
I said, “I come from New York.”
He said, “Now I understand your English. Ask me again.”
When I asked him, he said, “I am also a stranger, like you.”
RB 315. 1 June 1981↩
RB 316. 14 June 1981↩
RB 317. 20 June 1981↩
RB 318. 23 June 1981↩
RB 319. 27 June 1981↩
I told him, “You should come first, as you did last year. You show your deer-speed!”
“After this song I am charged, plugged in,” he said.
Then I gave him a copy of the song and I returned the pictures of his two daughters, Laura and Celeste, that he had given me. He saw that I had written “Blessings and Love” on their foreheads. He said, “Nothing means more than your blessings in my life.”
I am so happy that he won the half-marathon. Many years ago he had been interested in following our path when he was living in Los Angeles.
RB 320. 28 June 1981↩
Then Cahit Yeter came back after he had finished and ran the last mile and a half of the race with me.
RB 321. 28 June 1981↩
RB 322. 28 June 1981↩
RB 323. 1 July 1981↩
RB 324. 1 July 1981↩
The other morning at five o’clock, when I was running up 150th Street, Michael Berens started yelling from his window, “Good morning!” Since he lives in Sal’s house, he could see me from his room. He was yelling, “Good morning, Guru!” out the window, but I was tired and I didn’t have the strength to tell him, “Good morning!”
RB 325. 8 July 1981↩
RB 326. 8 July 1981↩
So I said, “Yes, now I am enjoying it. You come every morning at five o’clock to enjoy running with me. You people come!”
They were very surprised. They had thought that I would remain like the silent Brahmin and wouldn’t talk to them. I was on my fifth mile of hill work and I was dying. I was panting and making noise and they were mocking me.
After running five miles, I walked two miles up and down the hill. So I did seven miles of hill work. It is a little different when you run alone with nobody to cheer for you.
RB 327. 11 July 1981↩
The bus drivers also are very nice to me. I can be on the other side of the street, but still they will honk and wave. Often I go out to run, so now they recognise me.
RB 328. 11 July 1981↩
He said, “You are Sri Chinmoy!” and he made a cross sign on his forehead — not on his chest. He was very happy to see me. Then he ran with me for about two hundred metres. But he felt that he was a better runner so he went ahead of me. I was just behind him.
RB 329. 12 July 1981↩
The other one said, “Who?”
O God, the first woman who saw me wouldn’t answer because I was coming very near them and she didn’t want me to hear. Perhaps she was afraid of the pronunciation, afraid that she would be embarrassed.
Then, when I was about five metres ahead of them, the lady said, “Sri Chinmoy.” But when I was running next to them, she wouldn’t tell her friend who I was.
RB 330. 12 July 1981↩
Mitali was my first competitor when I started running and the second was Nemi. Like that I competed with about ten girls. Pranavananda’s assistant, Susan, gave me a very hard time. I ran and ran trying to pass her. At one point she went to drink water and I was very happy that she had stopped. I didn’t go to take a drink. O God, after drinking water, she got extra energy! So my intuition was totally wrong. I didn’t even dare to think of defeating her after that. But after covering a few hundred metres, she finally slowed down. Then, with Kritagyata, I had to struggle for at least four hundred metres to pass her.
After four miles I thought that all the worthless runners were behind me, so I didn’t have to worry. My ego was quite satisfied. Then all of a sudden I saw Sarama. I couldn’t lose to Sarama, so I was praying to my ego to come forward. Then my ego listened to my prayer and I defeated Sarama. It is a great achievement to beat Sarama. I didn’t know she was so far ahead of me, but I passed her at the four-mile mark.
After four hundred metres, whom did I see? Ilona! She was making noises: “Eee, Eee!” I said to myself, “Wait, wait.” Then during the fifth mile I ran so fast that I went two or three hundred metres ahead of her. She was nowhere near me at the finish.
RB 331. 12 July 1981↩
RB 332. 18 July 1981↩
O God, suddenly a police car came up quite fast and stopped abruptly. Two policemen came out of the car. They slammed the doors and entered into a small house nearby. A lady and her husband were in a panic about something. Something had happened. In ten minutes’ time I followed the same route home. I said to myself, “Let me see what is happening.” But there was no police car. There was absolutely nobody around.
RB 333. 18 July 1981↩
RB 334. 18 July 1981↩
RB 335. 20 July 1981↩
RB 336. 20 July 1981↩
RB 337. 21 July 1981↩
I am the only spiritual Master who runs. Others just hold meditations and become fat. I will definitely defeat all the spiritual Masters in running.
RB 338. 21 July 1981↩
RB 339. 1 August 1981↩
RB 340. 1 August 1981↩
When we run, at that time we forget everything. I will say I don’t need water. Then one second later I realise that I am so thirsty!
RB 341. 1 August 1981↩
Sri Chinmoy regards running as a perfect spiritual metaphor. “Try to be a runner and go beyond all that is bothering you and standing in your way,” he tells his students. “Be a real runner so that ignorance, limitations and imperfections will all drop far behind you in the race.” In this spirit he has inspired countless individuals to “run” — both literally and figuratively.
“Who is the winner?” he writes in one of his aphorisms. “Not he who wins the race, but he who loves to run sleeplessly and breathlessly with God the Supreme Runner.” As a fully God-realised spiritual Master, Sri Chinmoy has consecrated his life to this divinely soulful and supremely fruitful task. At the same time, on an entirely different level, he has made some significant contributions to the sport of running. He was the inspiration behind several long-distance relays, including a recent 300-mile run in Connecticut and the 9,000-mile Liberty-Torch run through all the states held during the 1976 Bicentennial. He has composed several running songs, which his students have performed at a number of races. His students have sponsored Sri Chinmoy Runs throughout the U.S., Canada, Europe and Australia as an offering to the running community. Moreover, Sri Chinmoy has encouraged his followers around the world to take up running as a means of overcoming lethargy and increasing their spiritual aspiration on the physical plane. Two hundred of his disciples, for example — most of whom were novice runners — completed last years’s New York City Marathon.
In the year he has been running, Sri Chinmoy himself has completed seven marathons. He averages about seventy to ninety miles a week, with most of his running done late at night or in the early hours of the morning. During his runs he has been chased by dogs, accosted by hooligans, greeted by admirers and cheered on by children. Sometimes he has had significant inner experiences; other times he has suffered deplorable outer experiences. As a spiritual Master of the highest order, Sri Chinmoy views these experiences — both the divine ones and the undivine ones — with a unique perspective. The running world is nothing but the human world in microcosm, and Sri Chinmoy’s reminiscences stand as a remarkable commentary on the whimsical, poignant, funny, outrageous and, above all, supremely significant experience we call life.From:Sri Chinmoy,Run and become, become and run, part 6, Agni Press, 1981
Sourced from https://srichinmoylibrary.com/rb_6