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Indispensable
Sweet
Mother, which things are truly indispensable for our life?
I
don't think they are the same for everyone. It depends on the country, it depends
on the habits, and to tell you the truth, if one analyses very closely, I don't
think there are many. You see, if you travel round the world, in every country
people have different habits of sleeping, habits of eating, habits of dressing,
habits for making their toilet. And quite naturally, they will tell you that
the things they use are indispensable. But if you change countries you will
realise that all these things are of no use for those people, because they mak
Bazaar
Sometimes we go to the bazaar to
buy our things. Is that good?
One
cannot make general rules. This depends on the spirit in which you make your
purchases. It is said that you should have no desires- if this is not a desire,
it is all right. You understand, there is no movement, no action which in itself
is good or bad; it depends absolutely on the spirit in which it is done. If,
for instance, you are in a state of total indifference about what you have and
what you do not (it is a condition a little difficult to realise, but after
all, one can attain it- a state of detachment: “If I have it, I have it; if
I don't, I don't"), there comes a
Possess Nothing
One
of these verses is very beautiful .We could translate it like this: “Happy is
he who possesses nothing, he will partake of the delight of the radiant gods."
To possess nothing does not at all mean not to make use of anything, not to
have anything at one’s disposal. “Happy is he who possess nothing": he is someone
who has no sense of possession, who can make use of things when they come to
him, knowing that they are not his, that they belong to the Supreme, and who,
for the same reason, does not regret it when things leave him; he finds it quite
natural that the Lord who gave him these things should take them away from him
fo
Indispensable
Needs
I am not even discussing the idea of need, for it is quite
arbitrary. I knew a Dutch painter who had come here, and done Sri Aurobindo’s
portrait (it seems this portrait is still existent). This Dutch painter was
practicing yoga. And so, one day, he told me this: “Oh! As for me, I think I
can do without anything. Truly I believe one can reduce one’s needs to a minimum.
But all the same, I must have a tooth-brush." I had not yet lived in India at
that time, otherwise I would have told him: “There are millions of people who
have never had a tooth-brush and whose teeth are quite clean. This is not the
only way of keeping one’s t
More
Conscious
The
more we are consciously in contact with our inner being, the more are the exact
means given to us.
The
Mother
13: 214
Comfort
When, as a child, I used to complain to my mother about food
or any such small matter she would always tell me to go and do my work or pursue
my studies instead of bothering about trifles. She would ask me if I had the
complacent idea that I was born for comfort. “You are born to realise the highest
Ideal," she would say and send me packing. She was quite right, though of course
her notion of the highest Ideal was rather poor by our standards. We are all
born for the highest Ideal: therefore, whenever in our Ashram some petty request
for more comfort and material happiness is refused, it is for your own good
to make you fulfil what you are here for.
Cleanliness
Cleanliness
is the first indispensable step towards the supramental manifestation.
The
Mother
13:
247
An
absolute cleanliness is indispensable in this country and climate to avoid illness.
Great precautions must be taken.
The
Mother
13:
247
Fan
Sweet
Mother,
Would
it be possible to have an electric fan? X promised me one three years ago, but
now he advises me to ask you.
You may have one if there
is one or if you can find one. But do you think it will help you to find the
Divine?
The Mother
16: 296
Excess
Excess
in any direction is violence; and only in peace, poise and harmony can the truth
be discovered and lived.
The
Mother
10:
322