The Supramental Yoga and the Evolutionary Process of Transformation
‘All religions have saved a number
of souls, but none yet has been able
to spiritualise mankind. For that
of souls, but none yet has been able
to spiritualise mankind. For that
there is needed not cult and creed,
but a sustained and all-comprehending
effort at spiritual self-evolution.’
Sri Aurobindo
CE, Volume 16, page 394
but a sustained and all-comprehending
effort at spiritual self-evolution.’
Sri Aurobindo
CE, Volume 16, page 394
Discussions with Patrizia Norelli-Bachelet
15 June 1986, Stone Ridge, New York
 
An Excerpt from Part One:
[If]
 you look at the Mother's work isolated, as such: what she was doing and
 what we suppose that she was supposed to have done, then you think... 
‘Well, nothing happened’. Everyone presumed that she would transform her
 body and come out looking like a young girl, or Lord knows what. But of
 course these ideas had no bearing on what she was really doing. So, in 
that particular work there were so many different levels you had to 
simply find your way through this labyrinth, through layers and layers 
until you got to the true work that was going on, that she did complete.
    I don't know if you've read any of my things on this. It's in The New Way
 basically...you know, it was very difficult for people in the [Sri 
Aurobindo] Ashram at that time, especially for those who had no 
understanding of what was to come. The experience was very difficult 
because it seemed that everything ended there, with no clear 
understanding of what it was she had actually done. And like Sri 
Aurobindo, she didn't really announce: ‘Well, I've finished and I'm 
going.’ Sri Aurobindo didn't do anything of the sort either. He just 
left in a very unusual fashion. But he had completed what he had to do.
   
 And I must say...I have to say, now, in this work...the people who are 
drawn to it and finally get involved, are those who are not concerned 
only with an individual development. This is very important. You cannot 
take it out of the context of the collective development and the world 
situation. In many other yogas and paths you can do that. But this 
particular work is almost, I would say, meaningless...in order to really
 understand it you have to see it in the context of the total 
development. As it is an integral yoga that Sri Aurobindo brought, in 
the same way the process is integral and has to deal with all levels. 
This may be very different from what we might...from the idea we may 
have of a collective work. That's another story. But...people, for 
example, who are only interested in their own personal development, 
usually become rather confused at a certain point. They don't understand
 why certain things happen, what does it all mean? When you do though, 
it is very exciting.'
A full transcript of this discussion is available at Puranic Cosmology Updated.
 
 
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