What
is Death?
I've
had a revelation.
It
was very interesting. That is, I was completely silent,
and all of a sudden, it came, and as always it kept
insisting until I noted it down.
It
came in the wake of a question: "What is death?..."
But then, the answer wasn't at all on the ordinary plane,
which means that the mind was perfectly silent.
It
came like this, imperative (Mother laughs):
Death
is the decentralization of the consciousness contained
in the body's cells.
With
a whole world of perceptions at the same time (Mother
makes a gesture around her), like a general terrestrial
consciousness, with examples showing that it's only
when the consciousness contained in the cells is decentralized
that one is dead. Otherwise, nothing, not even the heart
stopping, can cause death.
Naturally,
this decentralization stems from innumerable causes,
but they are causes we might call psychological. And
the cells contained in the body, or composing the body,
are held in form by a centralization of the consciousness
in them, and as long as that power of concentration
is there, the body cannot die. It's only when the power
of concentration disappears that the cells scatter.
And then one dies. Then the body dies.
The
sequel was like this....
(Mother
takes another note)
The
habitual concentration of Nature (produced by Nature)
is a MECHANICAL concentration which is subject to all
sorts of mechanical laws too, but... (Mother reads
out her note) Here is what came:
The
very first step towards immortality is to replace
the mechanical centralization by a willed centralization.
...
which comes from the inner Presence, which means that
through its will, the divine Presence concentrates the
cells.
There.
In
English, I put it like this:
Death
is the consequence of the decentralisation of the
Consciousness contained in the cells composing the
body.
And
then:
This
centralisation produced by Nature is mechanical and
it must be replaced by a willed centralisation.
Then...
(Mother takes other notes) I am continuing the
answers to the Aphorisms, and yesterday... (those Aphorisms
of Sri Aurobindo are extremely interesting, I had forgotten),
yesterday T. asked me a question (because in those Aphorisms,
Sri Aurobindo speaks of courage and love, meanness and
selfishness, nobleness and generosity, so she asked
me, "Could you give me the definition of these
words?" At first, I thought it wouldn't come, but
all of a sudden it came. So I noted it down, it's interesting.
(Mother
reads)
It
shouldn't be understood mentally, it should be understood
like this (gesture above the head), because the words
have a very vast meaning, as vast as possible, very
universal.
LOVE
is self-giving without asking for anything in exchange.
I
repeat, it's not at all on this plane (gesture below),
because it was... the exact definition of divine Love
as it acts.
Then
the two dark things:
MEANNESS
is a weakness that calculates and... (laughing)
demands from others the virtues one does not have.
SELFISHNESS
is to put oneself at the center of the universe
and to want everything to exist for one's own satisfaction.
NOBLENESS
is to refuse to make any personal calculation.
GENEROSITY
is to find one's own satisfaction in the satisfaction
of others.
Those
things come in an imperative wayI don't try, I
don't call. Even, after I read the questions, I said
to myself, "Oh, I'm not going to answer this"and
poff!
17
December 1969
- The Mother