Day Six: 3 pm - 12 midnight
It was my observation that men and women approached the race differently.
'Ach! Boys!' - or Why Women are Superior in Every Way
I think I must have looked worse than I actually felt.

For quite some days I felt as if I were running along quite well, but Karnayati Morison made several remarks about how I was walking.
I wanted to wail, ‘No, no! Look I’ve got my elbows bent and am moving
my arms back and forward. I’m running! I’m running! I’m not walking!’
In
fact, what I was doing probably didn’t even merit the word walking.
Once, the lap-counter failed to recognize me and called out ‘got you
Pavol’ to me. Fortunately Sanatan was there and corrected her - ‘That’s
not Pavol, it’s Barney. Barney can’t walk.’
People were very kind and solicitous and encouraging. I obviously looked pretty ugly.
At
one point Ingrid Kirschner from Munich slowed as she passed me and
asked if I were taking anything for my leg. When I answered no, she
offered the use of her helper to ply me with remedies.
Her helper turned out to have the entire pharmacopoeia of homeopathic and natural remedies – every pill, potion, balm, tincture, compress and medicament known to man.
She, very generously, pressed upon me any number of small white pills. They all looked the same to me and all seemed to have the same effect – to wit, none at all. I was very grateful none-the-less.
One of her pills that I had actually heard of was arnica.
When my Germanic good Samaritan asked if, even if I were taking nothing else, I at least was surely taking arnica. I had to answer no.
‘Ach, Boys!’ she exclaimed, ‘Zey never take anything for anything!’
It set me to thinking about the basic difference in the way men and women approached the race . . . and the inherent stupidity of one group and the obvious superiority of the other.
I watched the women trotting happily along the path with
their neat little ankle socks with the little pink pompoms at the heel,
their clean, fresh-laundered running gear, the little shining,
decorative hair clip holding their shining hair in a tidy pony tail –
and I felt like a Neanderthal.
Smelly, unwashed, unshaven, sun
burnt, my bandages grubby and tattered, a little of last night’s fine
dinner down the front of my shirt – I was a pioneer out to conquer the
distance with sheer guts, thrusting with unfocussed machismo through
the miles.
My new, and disapproving, assistant told me that ‘Ze
girls have been taking arnica for several days before ze race started.’
What?! Take sensible action ahead of time to prevent the swelling of
tissue that was so painfully debilitating me? Who could have thought of
that? . . . except a woman.
The very fact that Ingrid Kirschner had this helper and I didn’t have one, exemplified the different approaches.
‘A
healthy respect’ – it was a phrase that my brother used to use. He
thought it a good attitude. And no doubt it is – as is a healthy
disrespect.
A 'healthy respect' for the enormous challenge of
running for ten days is what the women showed in arming themselves not
only with arnica but also with a helper – someone who could provide all
those little things that make the undertaking more possible: someone to
do your laundry; someone to get you some ice at the end of each running
stint to cool your feet down; someone to help you out of bed and into
running gear and out the tent flap at 3 am; someone to press necessary
food or drink upon you when you are too befuddled to realize you need
it; someone to scuttle off to get your woolly hat from the tent when it
is needed; someone to . . . hand out the arnica and tell you when you
need some obscure tincture; someone, in the end, to just be a friend
and give a word of encouragement; someone to sing you a song when you
are down.
A man – what does he want with these things? With
absurd gung-ho spirit he shall plough on alone. He will get his own
ice, do his own washing - perhaps - (let us not delve too deeply into
that subject) – he will waste time staggering off to get his woolly hat
from the tent himself, he will do without arnica and food and, as he
falls apart, he will sing his own little funeral dirge to himself.
At
its best, let us call this a 'healthy disrespect'; a cavalier disregard
for the pride of frightening distance. Alternatively, one might just
call it plain old stupidity.
It is interesting to note that the
men who conformed most closely to this approach were the runners from
‘pioneering’ countries: ‘civilized’ Europeans less so.
Those of
us from the USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa - and I
have raced with them all in the multi-day races I have done – men whose
great grandfathers headed into the savage wilderness with just an axe
and an unquenchable belief that anything that God, nature or man threw
at them could be overcome purely with grit and ingenuity, we were the
ones out ‘colonising’ the miles with the same spirit.
It was
retired US general Jay Garner who once said, ‘We ought to be beating
our chests every day. We ought to look in a mirror and get proud and
stick out our chests and suck in our bellies and say: ‘Damn, we’re
Americans!’
Trying that in your tent at 3 am before heading out onto the track was not necessarily the best plan.
In
the end, the superiority of women is not speculation – it is a
quantifiable fact. Take the 22 competitors in the race: the average
distance covered by ‘the blokes’ in the ten days from April 26 to May 6
was 495 miles; the average member of the weaker sex managed . . . 503
miles.
Links:
The Self-Transcendence Ten Day Race was founded by Sri ChinmoyDetails of the race - results, photo galleries and such like - can be found at the race webpage - 2006 Self-Transcendence 6 & 10 Day Races

