|
“I
am not a Jnani…” The Jnani is one who follows the path of Knowledge,
one who wants to realise Yoga exclusively through Knowledge, and
who follows a purely intellectual path with the will to go beyond
it and attain Knowledge, which is no longer intellectual, but spiritual.
And Sri Aurobindo says: I am not a Jnani… I do not seek knowledge.
I have given myself to the Divine to accomplish His work and, by
the divine Grace, at every moment I know what must be known in order
to accomplish this work.
It
is an admirable state; it is perfect peace of mind. There is no
longer any need to accumulate acquired knowledge, received ideas
which have to be memorised; it is no longer necessary to clutter
one's brain with thousands and thousands of things in order to have
at one's command, when the time comes, the knowledge that is needed
to perform an action, to impart a teaching, to solve a problem.
The mind is silent, the brain is still, everything is clear, quiet,
calm; and at the right moment, by divine Grace a drop of light falls
into the consciousness and what needs to be known is known. Why
should one care to rememberwhy try to retain that knowledge?
On the day or at the moment that it is needed one will have it again.
At each second one is a blank page on which what must be known will
be inscribedin the peace, the repose, the silence of a perfect
receptivity.
One
knows what must be known, one sees what must be seen, and since
what must be known and seen comes directly from the Supreme, it
is Truth itself; and it completely eludes all notions of reason
or folly. What is true is truethat is all. And one has to
sink very low to wonder whether it is folly or reason.
Silence
and a modest, humble, attentive receptivity; no concern for appearances
or even any anxiety to be—one is quite modestly, quite humbly, quite
simply the instrument which of itself is nothing and knows nothing,
but is ready to receive everything and transmit everything.
The
first condition is self-forgetfulness, a total self-giving, the
absence of ego.
And the body says to the Supreme Lord: "What You want me to
be, I shall be; what You want me to know, I shall know; what You
want me to do, I shall do."
3
October 1958
- The Mother
|