MOTHER'S AGENDA

 

Vol. 11

 

Contents

  1970
January 3, 1970
January 7, 1970
January 10, 1970
January 14, 1970
January 17, 1970
January 21, 1970
January 28, 1970
January 31, 1970


February 4, 1970
February 7, 1970
February 11, 1970
February 18, 1970
February 21, 1970
February 25, 1970
February 28, 1970


March 4, 1970
March 7, 1970
March 13, 1970
March 14, 1970
March 18, 1970
March 21, 1970
March 25, 1970
March 28, 1970

April 1, 1970
April 4, 1970
April 8, 1970
April 11, 1970
April 15, 1970
April 18, 1970
April 22, 1970
April 29, 1970

   

May 2, 1970
May 6, 1970
May 9, 1970
May 13, 1970
May 16, 1970
May 20, 1970
May 23, 1970
May 27, 1970
May 30, 1970


June 3, 1970
June 6, 1970
June 10, 1970
June 13, 1970
June 17, 1970
June 20, 1970
June 27, 1970


July 1, 1970
July 4, 1970
July 8, 1970
July 11, 1970
July 18, 1970
July 22, 1970
July 25, 1970
July 29, 1970


August 1, 1970
August 5, 1970
August 12, 1970
August 22, 1970

 


September 2, 1970
September 5, 1970
September 6, 1970
September 9, 1970
September 12, 1970
September 16, 1970
September 19, 1970
September 23, 1970
September 26, 1970
September 30, 1970

October 3, 1970
October 7, 1970
October 10, 1970
October 14, 1970
October 17, 1970
October 21, 1970
October 24, 1970
October 28, 1970
October 31, 1970

November 4, 1970
November 5, 1970
November 7, 1970
November 11, 1970
November 14, 1970
November 18, 1970
November 21, 1970
November 25, 1970
November 28, 1970

December 2, 1970
December 3, 1970

 

ISBN 2-902776-33-0

September 19, 1970

(Mother looked better the previous Wednesday.)

Do you have something?

Now Mother, nothing special.... Have you seen any changes?

(Mother shakes her head negatively)

(Long meditation,
Mother pants for breath)

Do you have any questions?

(Mother shakes her head)

But it's over now, isn't it?

Oh yes, completely over.

(meditation again with labored breathing)

Do you have anything to ask?

I saw a text by Sri Aurobindo that I found interesting....

Oh!

Theresa question in fact. ...It's a letter [[In fact a conversation: see Talks with Sri Aurobindo by Nirodbaran, part I, p 179-180. ]] in which he refers to the

first period in the Ashram, when everyone was having "great

 experiences"; afterwards, there was a descent to the physical

 level. So he says:

"Working on the physical is like digging the ground; the

physical is absolutely inert, dead like stone. When the work

 began there, all former energies disappeared, experiences

stopped; if they came they didn't last. The progress is

 exceedingly slow. One rises, falls; rises again and falls again,

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 constantly meeting with the suggestions of the Vedic Asuras, 'You can't do anything, you are bound to fail.'

"You have to go on working and working year after year, point after point, till you come to a central point in the subconscient which has to be conquered and it is the crux of the whole problem, hence exceedingly difficult.... This point in the subconscient is the seed and it goes on sprouting and sprouting till you have cut out the seed."

7 January 1939

(after a silence)

Then doesn't he say something more ... more encouraging? (laughter)

(long silence)

What did he say, "a point"?

"A central point in the subconscient ... and it is the crux of the

 whole problem."

(after a long silence)

He didn't say what it was?

No, Mother.

(Mother gestures to say she does not know

 long concentration)

Nothing, nothing comes, nothing.

(long, panting silence)

Nothing, there's nothing to say. No experiences, nothing. What time is it?

Eleven, Mother.

Is there no work?... Working avoids concentrating. You see, it gives me a discomfort all over like this (gesture at the top of the chest).

But what gives you this?

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I don't know, I have it now.

Does it come from me?

No! No ... I live in a ... (Mother shakes her head).

(long silence)

It's better to read me something.

(Satprem reads a few Aphorisms of Sri Aurobindo

for the next issue of the Bulletin)

159 - He who recognizes no Krishna, the God in man,

 knows not God entirely; he who knows Krishna only,

 knows not even Krishna....

That's good, it's very GOOD.

Yet is the opposite truth also wholly true that if thou

canst see all God in a little pale unsightly and scentless

flower, then hast thou hold of His supreme reality.

Then I have hold of my supreme reality, but...! (Mother laughs) All right, it's good, it's some consolation! (laughter)

(Satprem goes on reading,

 then asks) Does it tire you?

Tire? Oh, no.... It comforts me a little! It doesn't tire me at all.

(silence

 Satprem lays his forehead

 on Mother's knees)

The next time, you'll read to me. At least it's ... [comforting?].

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