A Spiritual Lifter – Newsday – 1986 June 29 – Uses meditation
Filed under media coverage Text & PhotosA Spiritual Lifter
Chinmoy uses meditation to heave 1,300 pounds
Link to PDF – Grey scale scan from Photocopy
copy of OCR full text to be edited
(Photo)
Sri Chinmoy with one of the 40 who attended his meditation session last week at the U.N.
A Spiritual Lifter
Chinmoy uses meditation to heave 1,300 pounds
By Damian Cristodero
Sri Chinmoy sat quietly during a recent interview, answering questions in soft, polite tones, and only opening his eyes occasionally. But as the conversation turned to his childhood, his eyes opened slowly and he cracked a wide grin. “I was an active and dynamic child,” said the spiritualist and physical fitness advocate. “You could say that everybody in my family, all my brothers and sisters, were very calm and quiet. In that sense I was very mischievous. I used to break things and my parents said if I entered into a room, it was like a holocaust.” It is hard to imagine. Chinmoy was born in Chittagong. in what is now Bangladesh, and now lives in Jamaica, Queens. In addition to being his family’s No.1 mischief-maker, Chinmoy was the only member who enjoyed atbletiC8. Even afler entering the Sri Aurobindo ashram in Pondicherry, India, at the age of 12 to develop his apparent spiritunl awareness, his love of sporta continued. “Rlmning, jumping, throwing, any k.ind of physical activity,” Chinmoy said. Toduy, the name Sri Chinmoy is known Widely in fitness circle. around the world and to the thousands of amaleur runners in the New York City arell. The Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team sponsor~ more than 500 races a year worldwide, including the 1,000mile ultra marathon in Queens. Chinmoy himself was forced to give up running atu.r injuring his right leg in a rurming accident last year. As nn alternative, he turned to weightlifting and, at 5-7, 159 pol!.nds, the 54-year-old is wen-conditioned. When wearing his robes, however, Chinmay looks almost meek, though his supporters would say peaceful. Stin, Chimnoy sald he can support 240 pounds over his head with his rlght arm in an overhead lift -which starts with the weight slightly higher than shoulder level -and he said he lifte-l 1.300 pounds in 8 standing calf raise last Monduy. Both lifts are on videotape and were shown Wednesday during an affair in Queens celebrating Chinmoy’s first anniversary as a weightliftcr. Dr. Terry Todd, a physical education lnstrueter nt the Univer~ity of Texas at Austin, who has written five books on strenb>th and strenb>th truining, attended the gathering and said he has seen \rjdeote.pe~ of both lift.s. Todd made lt clear that there arc othe.. who could also accomplish that lift, but given Chinmoy’s height, weight and that he had been weighlifting for only a year, supporting 240 pounds was extraordinary. “Just to support it,” he said. “He’s holding it free. It’s like holding up a pro linebacker.”
Jim Smith, the British Amateur Weightlifting Association H.egistrar of All-Around Lifi.s, who also saw the videotepc at the gathering, said: “The chief thing really is, regardless of the manner in which itis performed, the final result is that u man of160 pounds and 54 years is holding a weight of240 pounds overhead. Then”! can’t be too many men in the world ofany weight and that age who can support that weight. Terry Todd, Bill Pearl [a four-time professional Mr. Universe who was also at the gathering] and I all ugree, whichever way you look at it, the lioal result is an absolutely tremendous feat.”
Todd said there is no yardstick to measure Chinmay’s calf raise because “nobody’s doing it” as a strength test. Todd, who has a Ph.D. in sporta history, said bodybuilders do the excerciae witb lighter weights and higher repetitions to increaBC calf size. He added, ”I’m pretty convinced tbat that’s b.igber than anybody has ever tried before, and I bear about such odd things and I’ve never heard about that.”
For the calf raise, Cbinmoy said be trained onJy nine days during a three-week period on the calf-raise machine. His strength, he said, comes from an inner power brought to the fore by deep meditation.
“r totally depend On GOO’s grace,” Chinmoy said. “My capacity is next to nothing, and I also know that no human being can achieve anything great or significant unless he has God’s grace. I know my strength is very limited, but from my prayer life and meditational life I get inspiration and the capacity to do these things.”
He uses that same principle during hiB “meditations for peace,” which he has conducted at (he United Nations since 1970 after an invitation by U.N. staff members. He was encouraged to continue the practice by then Secretary General U Thant, said Dhruva Hein, who helps handle Chinmoy’s public relations. Chinmoy, who earlier in the year concluded a worldwide peace concert series in which he played more than a dozen instruments and performed his own compositions, holds the hour-long sessions on Tuesdays and Fridays.
Last Tuesday’s session was attended by approximately 40 people. “We are otTering good thoughts, good will to the body, the vitsl mind, heart and soul of the United Nations,” Chinmoy said after the seSsion. “I am not a politician, I am not a diplomat, but I am a lover of God. So I am praying to God to grant peace to ali the workers, right from the secretary general to the general st.a1’f so that everybody can have peace. And this peace will inundate from here the length and breath of the world.”
Chinmoy docs not churge a fee for his services and hiB Sri Chinmoy Center in Queens survives on the sales of his 700 books and more than 30 tspe recordings on spirituality. He hO::l approximately 1,100 students worldwide, said Heint who is 8 program coordinator in a United Nations office that deals with developing countries.
But while meditation i8 the key to Chinmoy’s quest, he said he found out long ago that physical fitness is one key to good meditation. “Uyou have a severe headache or a stomach upset or something, or you have caught a cold. How can you meditate? If you have good health you will have no obstruction. Someone who wants to pray and meditate but is not in good shape, will have difficulties,” Chinmoy said.
His day begins at approximately 2 a.m. after only two hours sleep. For 60 to 90 minutes, Chinmoy, a
(PHOTO)
Sri Chinmoy meditates before lifting 1,300 pounds in a standing calf raise.
(PHOTO)
vegetarian, will meditate, followed by a rigorous exercise program. Practice on bis musical instrumenta is next, sometimes followed by two or t.hree hours of . tennis.
Chimnoy has a following. Kevin Keefe oC Seaford, L.I., who works for UNICEF, has run in the New York City Marathon, and swam the English Channel in September to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the United Nations. Keefe, wbo played basketball at Seaford High School, said he had long ago shunned organized sporta because they were too aggressi ve. Now, he aaid, athletics and meditation are intertwined. “As I got into it I saw a change in myself. [saw things like humility from doing endurance events,” said Keefe, who added that willie in coliege at the University of Dayton. rurming a mile was Q huge achievement. “And the experience I got from watching Sri Chinmoy doing it. UI hadn’t met someone like that I would never have been able to ยท put [athletics and meditation) together.”
The combination also has helped him on the job at the U.N. “I think my colleagues see it. It’s like a slow gTowth type of thing, but it’s incrimental progress. I’m rlble to handle things a lot more positively than I was before.” Keefe said.
That is the essence of Chimnoy’s philosophy. “Anything that is good we shaH try to increase and transcend ourselves. Anything that is bad we ahall try to decrease and diminish,” he aaid.
Said Todd: “I think that wbat be’s doing is his way. The way he knows to tap ioto the type of well. springs you bave to. My guess is he’s a lot more interested in moving past what he can do than in moving past what others can do.”
For Chinmoy, this is certain: “UI did not bave tbe capacity from my prayer life and meditation.”he….id, “I don’t think I would lift more than 60 pounda.”