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 30, 1970

(Mother is a little late.)

I don't know the days of the week, and I am not told the days, so I didn't know it was your day. That's why I am late. I don't know

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 the days at all. So I'll be seeing people, and suddenly I'll be told it's Wednesday, and ... I don't even know whether its Wednesday or Saturday. I live completely outside time, outside the small everyday reality.

(silence) I saw G. yesterday, he isn't too well.

(after a long silence) I feel he lives outside the atmosphere.

Yet he says he is so constantly turned to you.

There's something preventing the contact.

(after a silence)

His contact is mental. Physically, it's as if he lived elsewhere, you understand?

(long concentration on G.)

And then, the Dutch translation of The Adventure of Conscious

ness is going to be published, and D. asked A. M. to make a cover

 for the book. A. M. has done something he'd like to show you.

 Here is what he's done.... [[A lotus whose stem winds and turns under green waters, and whose closed bud just breaks the surface; above the waters, a dark green sky with a moon. ]] [Satprem shows the painting.]

Bah! it's really dark.

It's really dark, his world is dark.

Phew! it's hopeless.

It does look like that.

I don't like that.

I think the symbol is good, but the color ...

Yes. If he did the blue of the mind - the Consciousness making

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 its way out of the mind - if he did a blue of the mind, then it would be all right. But this black is disgusting.

And with a sun here.

One can't see the sun.

It's a moon, I think.... No, there should be the mind's blue and

 the sun rising.

Oh, yes! The moon won't do at all.

That's what I had felt.

No, not for your book. Instead of this, there should be something blossoming out. This is tight, confined, cramped - something blossoming out in a great light.

It won't do at all.

The other book, [[On the Way to Supermanhood. ]] you know, it's an adventure....

(Laughing) So then?

Nothing, it's an adventure.

Give me a paper (Mother draws).

First, no need to put so much water. It's better to have the thing above.

Instead of a stem that writhes (you don't writhe! [laughter]), you can put seven lines - seven lines. Then a gathering of the seven lines here (just above the surface of the waters). This is symbolic of the book's formation. And then here (above the waters), rise straight and ... (Mother draws seven lines opening up at the top of a stem). You understand: seven ascents (below) and here (above) seven responses. Like this. Seven lines gathering at a point that corresponds to this [the other point where the seven lines from below gather]. Then it has a meaning.

***

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(Then Satprem reads out an old Playground Talk of 16 September 1953,
which ends with these lines:)

"... Whereas, if one were open and simply breathing - that's all, doing nothing else - one would breathe Consciousness, Light, Comprehension, Force, Love and all the rest. But all that is wasted on the earth, because the earth isn't ready to take it. There."

Is the earth a little more ready. Mother?

(Mother goes into a very long contemplation

 lasting till the end, and does not answer)

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