Difference between revisions of "Sri Chinmoy"
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | '''Sri Chinmoy''' | + | '''Sri Chinmoy''' 1931-2007, was a philosopher,musician,artist,poet and in his youth an excellent sportsman. In the spiritual community where he grew up, he excelled in soccer and volleyball, and was the top-ranked sprinter. During his late teens he was also a decathlon champion. |
− | In the 1970s and 1980s, he was an active long-distance runner, completing many [[marathon]]s, [[ | + | In the 1970s and 1980s, he was an active long-distance runner, completing many [[marathon]]s, [[Ultramarathon|ultra-marathons]] and shorter races. For many years he played tennis almost every day, and frequently competed in track-and-field events in Masters Games, including the World Masters Games in Puerto Rico in 1983, and the World Veterans Games in Miyazaki, Japan in 1993. He took up weight-lifting in the mid-1980s and over the years set several records in the calf-raise and one-arm lift. |
− | Sri Chinmoy | + | Sri Chinmoy believed that a balanced lifestyle fosters [[World Harmony Run|harmony]] and inner peace. His integral approach to life encourages physical fitness and sports as a vehicle for personal transformation. |
"There are countless people on earth who do not believe in the inner strength or inner life. They feel that the outer life is everything. I do not agree with them," he says. "There is an inner life; there is spirit, and my ability to lift heavy weights proves that it can work in matter as well. I am doing these lifts with the physical body, but the power is coming from an inner source, from my prayer and meditation." | "There are countless people on earth who do not believe in the inner strength or inner life. They feel that the outer life is everything. I do not agree with them," he says. "There is an inner life; there is spirit, and my ability to lift heavy weights proves that it can work in matter as well. I am doing these lifts with the physical body, but the power is coming from an inner source, from my prayer and meditation." | ||
− | Sri Chinmoy | + | Sri Chinmoy practiced sports not only for the joy of it, and to keep the body fit, but also because he saw sports as a natural vehicle for expressing his philosophy of [[Self-Transcendence|self-transcendence]]. (Sahishnu Szczesiul) |
Latest revision as of 15:24, 19 September 2009
Sri Chinmoy 1931-2007, was a philosopher,musician,artist,poet and in his youth an excellent sportsman. In the spiritual community where he grew up, he excelled in soccer and volleyball, and was the top-ranked sprinter. During his late teens he was also a decathlon champion.
In the 1970s and 1980s, he was an active long-distance runner, completing many marathons, ultra-marathons and shorter races. For many years he played tennis almost every day, and frequently competed in track-and-field events in Masters Games, including the World Masters Games in Puerto Rico in 1983, and the World Veterans Games in Miyazaki, Japan in 1993. He took up weight-lifting in the mid-1980s and over the years set several records in the calf-raise and one-arm lift.
Sri Chinmoy believed that a balanced lifestyle fosters harmony and inner peace. His integral approach to life encourages physical fitness and sports as a vehicle for personal transformation.
"There are countless people on earth who do not believe in the inner strength or inner life. They feel that the outer life is everything. I do not agree with them," he says. "There is an inner life; there is spirit, and my ability to lift heavy weights proves that it can work in matter as well. I am doing these lifts with the physical body, but the power is coming from an inner source, from my prayer and meditation."
Sri Chinmoy practiced sports not only for the joy of it, and to keep the body fit, but also because he saw sports as a natural vehicle for expressing his philosophy of self-transcendence. (Sahishnu Szczesiul)
Todays Victory
We celebrate
Only to invoke
A new Goal.
Sri Chinmoy