Sri Aurobindo
Autobiographical Notes
and Other Writings of Historical Interest
Part Four. Sri Aurobindo’s Ashram and Yoga 1927–1949
Notices of May 1928 [1]1
It has been found necessary to change some of the forms
and methods hitherto used to help by external means the individual and
collective sadhana. This has to be done especially in regard to the consecration
of food, the collective meditation and the individual contact of the sadhaka
with the Mother. The existing forms were originally arranged in order to make
possible a spiritual and psychic communion on the most physical and external
planes by which there would be an interchange of forces, a continuous increase
of the higher consciousness on the physical plane, a more and more rapid change
of the external nature of the sadhakas and afterwards an increasing descent of
the supramental light and power into Matter. But for this to be done there was
needed a true and harmonious interchange, the Mother leading, the sadhakas
following her realisation and progress. The Mother would raise all by a free
self-giving of her forces, the sadhakas would realise in themselves her
realisations and would by the force of an unfaltering aspiration and a surrender
free from narrow personal demand and self-regarding littleness, consecrated
wholly to the divine work, return her forces for a new progress. At first partly
realised, this rhythm of interchange has existed less and less. The whole burden
of the progress has fallen physically on the body of the Mother; for the forces
it gives it receives little or nothing in exchange; the more its consciousness
advances in the light, the more it is pulled back towards the unchanged
obscurity of an unprogressive external nature. These conditions create an
intolerable and useless strain and make the forms used at once unprofitable and
unsafe. Other means will have to be found hereafter for the purpose. Meanwhile modifications of form will have to be made in several
details and others suppressed altogether.
26 May 1928
1 Sri Aurobindo wrote this note after the Mother suffered a serious illness. He insisted at this time on introducing changes in the schedule of Ashram activities in order to lessen the pressure of work on her.