About the author:

Tejvan organises short-distance running and cycling races for the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team in his home city of Oxford. He is also a very good cyclist, having won the National hill climb championships in 2013 and finished 3rd in the National 100 Mile Time Trials in 2014.

“This is something I also discovered during the seven weeks I followed and volunteered at the race. The entire thing—the course, the distance, and the repetitive nature of the race—are not bugs but features. According to those who run it and organize it, the race is less a physical challenge—although, undoubtedly, it is a huge one—than it is a spiritual one. “People call it runner’s high; we call it the soulful dimension of the race,” says Bipin Larkin, a race organizer and longtime disciple of its founder. “You just get in a zone, where it’s something more than the physical, something more than the mind. It doesn’t stay that way the whole time. That’s the battle.”

The 3,100-Mile Race on a Half-Mile Block in NYC: Insanity or the Ultimate Test of Endurance? at Runner's World