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His
words did not impress me. They seemed to me to be yet one more excuse to
add to the long list of those I had heard from swamis all over the
country. He had promised to show me God, yet now he was trying to tell
me that not only could he not show me God, no one else could either. I
would have dismissed him and his words without a second thought had it
not been for an experience I had immediately after he had told me to
find out who this ‘I’ was who wanted to see God.
At the conclusion of his words he looked at me, and as he gazed into my
eyes, my whole body began to tremble and shake. A thrill of nervous energy
shot through my body. My nerve endings felt as if they were dancing and
my hair stood on end. Within me I became aware of the spiritual Heart.
This is not the physical heart, it is, instead, the source and support
of all that exists. Within the Heart I saw or felt something like a
closed bud. It was very shining and bluish. With the Maharshi looking at
me, and with myself in a state of inner silence, I felt this bud open
and bloom. I use the word ‘bud’, but this is not an exact
description. It would be more correct to say that something that felt
bud-like opened and bloomed within me in the Heart. And when I say
‘Heart’ I don’t mean that the flowering was located in a
particular place in the body. This Heart, this Heart of my Heart, was
neither inside the body nor out of it. I can’t give a more exact description
of what happened. All I can say is that in the Maharshi’s presence,
and under his gaze, the Heart opened and bloomed. It was an
extraordinary experience, one that I had never had before. I had not
come looking for any kind of experience, so it totally surprised me when
it happened.
Though
I had had an immensely powerful experience in the presence of the
Maharshi, his statement ‘You alone are God’ and his advice to
‘Find out who the seer is’ did not have a strong appeal for me. My
inclination to seek a God outside me was not dispelled either by his
words or by the experience I had had with him.
I
thought to myself, ‘It is not good to be chocolate, I want to taste
chocolate’. I wanted to remain separate from God so that I could enjoy
the bliss of union with Him.
When
the devotees came in that afternoon I viewed them all with the rather
prejudiced eye of a fanatical Krishna bhakta.
So far as I could see, they were just sitting quietly, doing nothing. I
thought to myself, ‘No one here seems to be chanting the name of God.
Not a single person has a mala
to do japa with. How can they consider themselves to be good
devotees?’ My views on religious practice were rather limited. All
these people may have been meditating, but so far as I was concerned,
they were wasting their time.
I
transferred my critical gaze to the Maharshi and similar thoughts
arose. ‘This man should be setting a good example to his followers.
He is sitting silently, not giving any talks about God. He doesn’t
appear to be chanting the name of God himself, or focusing his attention
on Him in any way. These disciples are sitting around being lazy because
the Master himself is sitting there doing nothing. How can this man show
me God when he himself shows no interest in Him?’
With
thoughts like these floating around my mind it was not long before I
generated a feeling of disgust for both the Maharshi and the people who
surrounded him. I still had some time before I had to report for duty in
Madras, but I didn’t want to spend it with all these spiritually
lazy people in the ashram. I took off to the other side of Arunachala, a
few kilometres away, found a nice quiet spot in the forest on the
northern side of the hill, and settled down there to do my Krishna japa,
alone and undisturbed.
I
stayed there for about a week, immersed in my devotional practices.
Krishna would often appear before me, and we spent a lot of time playing
together. At the end of that period I felt that it was time to go back
to Madras to make preparations for my new job. On my way out of town I
paid another visit to the ashram, partly to say goodbye, and partly to
tell the Maharshi that I didn’t need his assistance for seeing God
because I had been seeing Him every day through my own efforts.
When
I appeared before him, the Maharshi asked, ‘Where have you been? Where
are you living?’
‘On
the other side of the mountain,’ I replied.
‘And
what were you doing there?’ he inquired.
He
had given me my cue. ‘I was playing with my Krishna,’ I said, in a
very smug tone of voice. I was very proud of my achievement and felt
superior to the Maharshi because I was absolutely convinced that Krishna
had not appeared to him during that period.
‘Oh,
is that so?’ he commented, looking surprised and interested. ‘Very
good, very nice. Do you see Him now?’
‘No
sir, I do not,’ I replied. ‘I only see Him when I have visions.’ I
was still feeling very pleased with myself, feeling that I had been
granted these visions, whereas the Maharshi had not.
‘So
Krishna comes and plays with you and then He disappears,’ said the
Maharshi. ‘What is the use of a God who appears and disappears? If he
is a real God, He must be with you all the time.’
The
Maharshi’s lack of interest in my visionary experiences deflated me
a little, but not to the extent that I was willing to listen to his
advice. He was telling me to give up my search for an external God and
instead find the origin and identity of the one who wanted to see Him.
This was too much for me to swallow. A lifetime of devotion to Krishna
had left me incapable of conceiving the spiritual quest in any other
terms than that of a quest for a personal God.
Though
his advice did not appeal to me, there was still something about the
Maharshi that inspired and attracted me. I asked him to give me a
mantra, hoping thereby to get his sanction for my own form of
spirituality. He refused, although later, when I was back in Madras, he
did give me one in a dream. I then asked him if he would be willing to
give me sannyasa
since I was not very keen to take up my new job in Madras. I had only
taken it because it had offered me a way of getting to see the
Maharshi. He refused that request too. Having therefore got, in my own
jaundiced opinion, nothing from the Maharshi except a good experience
and some bad advice, I returned to Madras to take up my new job.
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