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Sri Chinmoy's students describe their inner and outer experiences.
Is it unspiritual to care about winning?
Tejvan Pettinger Oxford, United Kingdom
Reflections on meditation
Janaka Spence Edinburgh, United Kingdom
My first Guru
Adarini Inkei Geneva, Switzerland
Praying for God’s Grace to Descend
Sweta Pradhan Kathmandu, Nepal
The day I saw my Guru for the first time
Natabara Rollosson New York, United States
I just knew from the moment I saw him
Ashrita Furman New York, United States
Patanga: my spiritual name
Patanga Cordeiro São Paulo, Brazil
People see something in Guru and want to be part of it
Saraswati Martín San Juan, Puerto Rico
Listen to the inner voice
Vidura Groulx Montreal, Canada
Meeting Sri Chinmoy for the first time
Janaka Spence Edinburgh, United Kingdom
President Gorbachev: a special soul brought down for a special reason
Mridanga Spencer Ipswich, United Kingdom
The day I made a useless and ridiculous weightlifting machine for Guru
Devashishu Torpy London, United KingdomSuggested videos
interviews with Sri Chinmoy's students
A childhood meeting with Sri Chinmoy
Devashishu Torpy London, United Kingdom
Growing up on Sri Chinmoy's path
Aruna Pohland Augsburg, Germany
Sri Chinmoy's vision of the Peace Run
Harita Davies New York, United States
What meditation gave me that I was missing
Purnahuti Wagner Guatemala City, Guatemala
Humorous moments with Sri Chinmoy
Toshala Elliott Auckland, New Zealand
Running the world's longest race
Jayasalini Abramovskikh Moscow, Russia
When I was ten I lived on the edge of a town in a house surrounded by paddocks filled with finches and pheasants and bright yellow buttercups. A train line connecting us to a larger world ran fifty metres from our small home and on Sundays I would lie in concealment in the long grass with the pennies intended for the church collection box placed carefully on the steel tracks, watching in fascination as the 10am train rushed by, crushing them into bronze wafers.
At age eleven, my crushed coin collection still intact, I was excused any further dealings with our local church - a milestone day in my life - but instead subjected to Scottish dancing lessons, also ominously on a Sunday. There I met Alwyn, my thirteen year old red headed Scots dancing partner – in a moment of ingratiating foolishness I presented her with one of my treasured train modified coins, claiming it was a priceless ancestral relic handed down through generations of our clan from the 1746 
