AT THE FEET OF THE MOTHER
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Savitri

“Within you is a psychic being—a divine being, a direct portion of the Mother, pure and untouched by all these defects. It is hidden and covered by ordinary consciousness and nature. But when its covering is removed and it becomes able to come forward and take control, it transforms the ordinary consciousness, casts out all these undivine elements, and thoroughly transforms the outer nature.” – Sri Aurobindo. How will the psychic being come forward and change our nature? 😊🙏🏻❤️‍🔥🌷

First one has to find the psychic being, make it one’s sole preoccupation and the occupation. It means an ongoing inner concentration in the centre

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Sir, why in Sadness and in Grief, we seem to be more Open to the Divine Mother? I was reading lines of Savitri and the Mother’s Prayer, tears flowed, my centre shifted to Heart(effortlessly), I felt the absorption of the Consciousness, my breath rate increased, I couldn’t hold myself for a while. 📖🥲🥹❤️‍🔥🌼[…]

Grief is a state of intense concentration and can, if the consciousness makes just a little shift open the doors the Divine. As the Mother

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This is a question from my mother. After listening to your talk about the Mother’s Aspects in Savitri, she wanted to know about Ashta Lakshmi and what they represent. Also, what was their role as the eight wives of Sri Krishna? What is the difference between their love and Radha’s love for Sri Krishna? 👰🏼🦚😊🙏🏻🌷

The eight wives of Sri Krishna are the eight aspects of Nature-forces or Nature-energies from the subconscient, earthly to the higher heavenly kind. By wedding

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I’m just starting to read Savitri🕊️, and was just wondering about the general and deeper synopsis. The story itself is based on a story from MahaBharata? But I’ve heard some people say also that though the story is based on that, that Savitri is the representation of the spiritual evolution of the Soul and Satyavan is the Spiritual Destiny? I’m a bit confused on the grand symbolic meaning of the epic.

As to the story of Savitri and Satyavan it is narrated in the Mahabharata as well as Brahmvaivarta Purana as a tale of conjugal love

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