Questions and Answers 1956
What man calls God is a limited consciousness of God, not the
full consciousness of God; so he will go beyond this limited
consciousness of God and towards the true Divine.
Sri Aurobindo means that man has a limited knowledge, a
limited consciousness and perception and experience of God, not
the full experience of the Divine, and that he must pass beyond
this knowledge and perception in order to go to the vaster and
truer perception.
Yes, the justification of earthly existence is that one is on earth
to realise the Divine.
Without this reason earthly life would be a monstrosity.
(Silence)
If therewere not this supreme reason, of rediscovering the Divine
and becoming Him, manifesting Him, realising Him externally,
earthly life as it is would be something monstrous.
Naturally, the more people are unconscious, the less do they
understand this, for they do not objectify, they live mechanically,
according to habit, without even objectifying or being aware of
their way of living. And as the consciousness grows, they realise
the kind of monstrous hell life is—life as it is.
And it is only when one becomes conscious of that towards
which this life leads, that one can accept it and understand it. It
is only this purpose of life which makes it acceptable. Without that it
would truly be a frightful monstrosity.
Sweet Mother, what is a “divine pleasure”?1
It is the pleasure of the Divine.
How...?
What do you want me to tell you, child? You must live it and
then you will know what it is.
It is what is called Ananda in Sanskrit. And we have often
said before that to know this Ananda, one must first have completely
renounced all human pleasures, to begin with, for so long
as a human pleasure delights you, you are not in the right state
to know the Ananda.
It may come to you and you will not even be aware of it.
“A spiritual Truth and Right have convicted the good
and evil of this world of imperfection or of falsehood
and unveiled a supreme good.... But behind all these
and in them he has felt a Divinity who is all these things,
a Bringer of Light, a Guide and All-Knower, a Master of
Force, a Giver of Bliss, Friend, Helper, Father, Mother,
Playmate in the world-game, an absolute Master of his
being, his soul’s Beloved and Lover.”
Ibid., p. 120
Can the Godhead be all these things at once for anybody?
Yes, and many more.
This is only a very brief description!
But here too, if one wants to have this experience, one must
not seek in life and among men for these relationships, because
if one seeks them in the ordinary life, as ordinary relationships,
one becomes incapable of feeling them exactly as the Divine can
give them. And usually, most people, even those who have a
living soul, seek these relations with the Divine only after they
have had the most bitter and disappointing experiences in their
search for human relationships.
This makes them lose much time and wastes a lot of energy.
And usually, they are already quite worn out and spent when
they reach the state in which they are capable of having these
relations in all their splendour with the divine Presence.
That means much time lost and much wastage of energy;
but it would seem that very few people can go straight avoiding
all these roundabout ways. Mostly, when they are told that
there is a divine Joy and a divine Plenitude which far surpass
all they can imagine in ordinary life, they don’t believe it; and
to believe it they must have, as I said, gone through a painful
experience of all that is false, deceptive and disappointing in
ordinary relationships.
It is said that example is the best teacher, but in fact there
are very few who care to follow an example—especially when
the examples are a little too far beyond them. They all want to
have their own experience; they have the right to it, but that
makes the path interminable.
Sweet Mother, if one needs something, like a mother’s
affection or some help, how can one feel it in the Divine,
according to one’s need?
What exactly do you want to say?
If, for example, one wants to know something or one
needs guidance, or something else, how can one have it from the Divine, according to one’s need?
By asking the Divine for it. If you do not ask Him, how can you
have it?
If you turn to the Divine and have full trust and ask Him,
you will get what you need—not necessarily what you imagine
you need; but the true thing you need, you will get. But you
must ask Him for it.
You must make the experiment sincerely; you must not endeavour
to get it by all sorts of external means and then expect
the Divine to give it to you, without even having asked Him.
Indeed, when you want somebody to give you something, you
ask him for it, don’t you? And why do you expect the Divine to
give it to you without your having asked Him for it?
In the ordinary consciousness the movement is just the opposite.
You assume something, saying, “I need this, I need this
relationship, I need this affection, I need this knowledge, etc.
Well, the Divine ought to give it to me, otherwise He is not the
Divine.” That is to say, you reverse the problem completely.
First of all, you say, “I need.” Do you know whether you
truly need it or whether it is only an impression you have or a
desire or quite an ignorant movement? First point: you know
nothing about it.
Second point: it is precisely your own will you want to
impose upon the Divine, telling Him, “I need this.” And then
you don’t even ask Him for it: “Give it to me.” You say, “I need
it. Therefore, since I need it, it must come to me, quite naturally,
spontaneously; it’s the Divine’s job to give me all that I need.”
But if it so happens that truly you don’t know what you
need and it is merely an illusion and not a truth and that, into
the bargain, you ask it from life around you and don’t turn to
the Divine, don’t create any relationship between yourself and
Him, don’t think of Him or turn to Him with at least some
sincerity in your attitude, then, as you ask nothing from Him,
there is no reason for Him to give you anything. But if you ask Him, as He is the Divine He knows a little
better than you what you need; He will give you what you need.
Or else, if you insist and want to impose your own will, He
may give you what you want in order to enlighten you and make
you conscious of your mistake, that it was truly not the thing
you needed. And then you begin to protest—I don’t mean you
personally, I am speaking of all human beings—and you say,
“Why has the Divine given me something which harms me?”—
completely forgetting that it was you who asked for it!
In both cases you protest all the same. If He gives you what
you ask and then that brings you more harm than good, you
protest. And again, if He doesn’t give it, you also protest: “What!
I told Him I needed it and He doesn’t give it to me.”
In both cases you protest, and the poor Divine is accused.
Only, if instead of all that, you simply have an aspiration
within you, an urge, an intense ardent need to find That, which
you conceive more or less clearly to be the Truth of your being,
the Source of all things, the supreme Good, the Answer to all we
desire, the Solution to all problems; if there is this intense need
in you and you aspire to realise it, you won’t any longer say to
the Divine, “Give me this, give me that”, or, “I need this, I must
have that.” You will tell Him, “Do what is necessary for me and
lead me to the Truth of my being. Give me what Thou in Thy
supreme Wisdom seest as the thing I need.”
And then you are sure of not being mistaken, and He will
not give you something which harms you.
There is a still higher step, but it’s a little more difficult to
begin with that.
But the first one is already a much truer approach than that
of telling the Divine, “I need this. Give it to me.” For indeed,
very few people really know what they need—very few. And
the proof of it is that they are always in pursuit of the fulfilment
of their desires, all their effort is bent upon that, and each time
one of their desires is fulfilled, they are disappointed. And they
pass on to another. And after much seeking, making many mistakes, suffering
a good deal and being very disappointed, then, sometimes, one
begins to grow wise and wonders if there isn’t a way out of all
this, that is to say, a way to come out of one’s own ignorance.
And it is then, at that moment that one can do this (Mother
opens her arms): “Here I am, take me and lead me along the
true path.”
Then all begins to go well.
Open to Sri Aurobindo's consciousness and let it transform your life.
- The Mother (26 September 1971)