Aug 15

Surasa Mairer – Ultra Running Champion

Surasa Mairer, a 51 year old ultra runner from Austria, runs circles around the competition. Backwards and forwards she forges new territory for women runners and shows women and men alike new horizons of possibility.

She runs backwards and forwards literally. She set 4 world records by running backwards (retro-running). She was the first woman in the world to backwards run a half-marathon, marathon, 10K and 5K race.

Her first marathon backwards was in 2004 at an event called Impossibility Challenger held in Germany near Munich. Her second attempt at a backwards marathon was a Guinness Record in a time of 6:27:11 in the Munich Mediamarathon in 2005.

Born in Tyrol, Austria in March 1959, Surasa (born Paula) Mairer has worked for a number of years as a secretary in academic settings – most recently the University in Salzburg. Surasa didn’t discover her extraordinary gift for running until she was 28 years old.

In an English translation of an article written in German about her running achievements, Roby Schiltz describes,

…she is a wonderful example how out of a non-runner you can become an ultra runner and this in a completely natural way. As she began running with 28 years already 10 kilometres seemed an insurmountable barrier for her. Only a few years later she was fervently dedicating herself to multi day races. In September 1996 and 1997 she won the 700-Mile-Race (1120 km) and 1999 and 2000 the 1000-Mile-Race (1600 km) on Wards Island, USA. 2001 she ran the world record at the 1300-Mile-Race (2080 km) and thus lowered the 10 year old record of Sandra Barwick from New Zealand by 1 hour 33. In September 2002 she ran the world record in the 700-Mile-Race and over 1000 km. In September 2003 she won again the 1000-Mile-Race. 2004 she went for a “short distance”. She participated and won the 4-Day-Race in Prague.

Obviously, when Surasa runs forward her excellence and achievements are no less amazing than her backwards running talent. In 2007 she was the women’s winner with 595 miles in the Ten Day Race after a period of five years without running a multiday race. She has in fact won nearly every multiday race she has ever entered in her entire running career.

Last but not least, Surasa kept the tradition alive of a solitary female entrant among a much larger pool of male entrants in the 3100 mile race. 2010 marked her first ever 3100 mile race for 52 days this summer. For the last 13 years, Suprabha Beckjord was the first and only woman who ran the 3100 mile race in a field of male runners. This year Suprabha did not run but visited the runners as a helper. Surasa carried on the tradition as the second woman in the world to ever run the 3100.

She completed 2760 miles by the end of the race, an awesome achievement in conditions of some of the worst heat the East Coast has ever seen this summer.

Surasa is a meditation student of Sri Chinmoy and attributes her running success to her practise of meditation.

View pictures of her taken by me towards the end of the 2010 edition of the race.

Aug 08

Half Century Humor – Pt. 2

What are the chances that when I am finding my hands full just trying to fan myself silly during the latest hot flash, am way less productive and more tired, or am trying to cope with the latest thing I forgot — like how I left my mobile phone at work Friday and am without it all weekend…

You see I sprang for an almost smart phone, the Rumor Touch, because Virgin Mobile offers a cheap month-to-month unlimited data, text and good enough phone minutes. It kind of painfully surfs the web, takes photos and video – this is a big step up from my previous ten dollar phone.

It’s another reason to laugh because now that I own a phone that doesn’t cost 20+ cents per minute,  I am more likely to be without my mobile phone than with it because I am just as likely to leave it at home when I go to work rather than forget it at work…

What are the chances that when I joke about women who have gone through the change not having children because they would misplace them…

What are the chances that this is when I would suddenly find myself Mama to a cat?? I had cats in my house growing up but I was a kid then — which needless to say is a different story than being the one responsible for the cat’s feeding, care and litter box. I am certainly an animal lover and as a child was quite partial to cats over dogs (I know, I know – most people I know are partial to dogs and dislike cats).

However, the last 30 years of my adult life have featured various living arrangements and lifestyles that might be considered downright neglectful to a pet, even an independent minded cat. I live alone currently, am gone long hours, go away on weekends at least once a month and love to travel. Add those ingredients together and it is easy to see why I never had a pet once I moved out of my parent’s house.

Despite these circumstances, when I began to realize there was a stray cat living around my house 24/7, I gave him some kefir and the next thing I knew I was bringing him to the Vet to see if he had a microchip and found out that he used to live indoors at some stage of his life because he is neutered and declawed. I had no luck in reuniting him with his previous owner and decided that perhaps an owner who isn’t home much is a step up from living on the street without claws.

I must say when I added a deck off the back of my house this summer to bring the great outdoors of my backyard more into my radar I never imagined part of the great outdoors would be a cat taking up residence on the deck and taking up residence in my life.

Now a cat who is either an abandoned or lost pet comes with “issues”.  So maybe I’m more like a foster parent than a mama. He is starved for affection and gets his nose out of whack on the days I work late. He is happiest when I stay home nearby him while he mostly sleeps. He has litterbox issues, food issues and water issues but as I try to read up on cats I find that he is quite normal in most regards. The books I am reading include Outwitting Cats by Wendy Christensen and Think Like a Cat by Pam Johnson-Bennett.

He is a Siamese, about 5 or 6 years old according to the Vet and they thought I should name him Buddha, because they said he has a Buddha belly. I found their suggestion amusing considering my own love of Eastern Spirituality and Buddhist temples that I have visited in Asia. So what did I name him? Mr. Bowtie. Siam is the ancient name for modern-day Thailand and I contemplated various names related to Thailand. It’s unconventional but I liked the wordplay involved in how the tie in bowtie sounds the same as Thai. It’s Tae-bo backwards too. And he has a ring of skin around his neck where the fur is completely gone underneath the bell collar he had on when I rescued him. The Vet said it wasn’t really a pet collar but more like a Christmas ornament.

I have been trying for 2 weeks to write about activities related to the Sri Chinmoy Centre such as my impressions and photos of this year’s 3100 mile race that ended last Tuesday. Instead I’m researching kitty litter, trying to get Bowtie to adjust to life in my house and just generally bonding with him.

Since my life at work this summer has been super busy helping to coordinate and run a Summer Reading program for children and full of disruption from the AC of the building calling it quits (and even after a mucho expensive repair it looks like it might be quits for good), I think I am waving the white flag of surrender. Surrender to life without air conditioning during the hottest summer on record and surrender to writing about a little four-legged furry creature (instead of the 3100 race) whose blue eyes and purr have melted my heart.

Here are some pictures of the new member of my household, taken when he was just beginning to transition into the house. And who knows, maybe my doting on him will take my mind off all my other midlife woes. Guess the maternal instinct doesn’t have a shelf life after all.