SITE OF SRI AUROBINDO & THE MOTHER
      
Home Page | Works | Letters of Sri Aurobindo

Sri Aurobindo

Letters of Sri Aurobindo

SABCL 26

Fragment ID: 8005

It is not a question of liking but of capacity – though usually (not always) liking goes with the capacity. But capacity can be developed and liking can be developed or rather the rasa you speak of. One cannot be said to be in the full Yogic condition – for the purposes of this Yoga – if one cannot take up with willingness any work given to one as an offering to the Divine. At one time I was absolutely unfit for any physical work and cared only for the mental, but I trained myself in doing physical things with care and perfection so as to overcome this glaring defect in my being and make the bodily instrument apt and conscious. It was the same with some others here. A nature not trained to accept external work and activity becomes mentally too1 top-heavy – physically inert and obscure. It is only if one is disabled or physically too2 weak that physical work can be put aside altogether. I am speaking of course from the point of view of the ideal – the rest depends upon the nature.

As for the deity presiding over the control of servants, godown work as well as over poetry and3 painting, it is always the same – the Shakti, the Mother.

11-12-19344

 

1 The word “too” was omitted in later publication

Back

2 too physically (later edition)

Back

3 or (later edition)

Back

4 12-12-1934 (earlier edition)

Back