Sri Aurobindo
Letters on Himself and the Ashram
The Complete Works of Sri Aurobindo. Volume 35
Rules in the Life of the Ashram
No Propaganda or Proselytism [6]
It may be said generally that to be overanxious to pull 
people, especially very young people, into the sadhana is not wise. The sadhak 
who comes to this Yoga must have a real call, and even with the real call the 
way is often difficult enough. But when one pulls people in in a spirit of 
enthusiastic propagandism, the danger is of lighting an imitative and unreal 
fire, not the true Agni, or else a short-lived fire which cannot last and is 
submerged by the uprush of the vital waves. This is especially so with young 
people who are plastic and easily caught hold of by ideas and communicated 
feelings not their own — afterwards 


 the vital 
rises with its unsatisfied demands and they are swung between two contrary 
forces or rapidly yield to the strong pull of the ordinary life and action and 
satisfaction of desire which is the natural bent of adolescence. Or else the 
unfit ādhāra tends to suffer under the stress of a 
call for which it was not ready, or at least not yet ready. When one has the 
real thing in oneself, one goes through and finally takes the full way of 
sadhana, but it is only a minority that does so. It is better to receive only 
people who come of themselves and of these only those in whom the call is 
genuinely their own and persistent.
the vital 
rises with its unsatisfied demands and they are swung between two contrary 
forces or rapidly yield to the strong pull of the ordinary life and action and 
satisfaction of desire which is the natural bent of adolescence. Or else the 
unfit ādhāra tends to suffer under the stress of a 
call for which it was not ready, or at least not yet ready. When one has the 
real thing in oneself, one goes through and finally takes the full way of 
sadhana, but it is only a minority that does so. It is better to receive only 
people who come of themselves and of these only those in whom the call is 
genuinely their own and persistent.
6 May 1935