She did what She always does
20 September 2000, Amritapuri,
Amma's Birthday
When there are fifty thousand or more devotees in Amritapuri to
celebrate Amma's birthday, 'living with Amma' has a new meaning.
It no longer means you sit with Her for meditation and satsang in
the morning, as normally happens three days a week; nor does it
mean you sit quietly in the temple, a yard or two away, watching
Her give darshan, as you can on the other four days of the week.
No, 'living with Mother' on such days generally means distance -
you are not likely to be close to Her Form, for you are working
hard, at lots of jobs you don't ordinarily do.
Maybe you ordinarily work in the ashram press, but on this special
day you are needed to make food for the thousands that throng to
have a glimpse of Amma, or to serve food. Maybe you usually work
in one of the offices - say, the School or Accommodation Office;
but for Amma's Birthday you have the every-couple-of-hours toilet
cleaning duty. Perhaps on an ordinary day you work in the café
or the small grocery store at the ashram; but on this day you are
delivering leaf plates to the various food counters where devotees
take their meals. Maybe your ordinary work keeps you in front of
a computer most of the time - but on Mother's Birthday you are not
at your screen; you are helping with crowd control in the big new
semi-outdoor auditorium at the south side of the ashram. Or, did
you leave your Matruvani editing job to help distribute pensions
to the poor who gathered near the hospital south of the ashram?
Whatever you found yourself doing on 19 September 2000, it almost
surely was not what you usually do unless you were Amma. Amma did
what She usually does.
Of course, some details were different: She did come a little earlier
than usual, and head out to the new auditorium instead of to the
temple. The sound of the conch reverberated throughout the hall
announcing Her arrival, thousands of throats chanted 'Om Amriteshwaryai
Namah' or called out 'Amma, Amma' a wave of love and devotion engulfed
all. And when Amma got to the stage - She sat still, eyes closed,
hands folded, the perfect image of humility, while one disciple,
on behalf of all, performed a formal Pada Puja to the chanting of
Vedic mantras. Next, satsang, and greetings to dignitaries, and
awards to Matruvani subscription competition winners, and keys to
new homes for the poor. Yes, there were these little deviations
from Mother's ordinary day. But in the end She did what She always does: She sat hugging, whispering, listening, reassuring, caressing,
scolding, patting, smiling, consoling - in short, interacting with
each one who approached Her in the way he or she needed. Amma gave
darshan, in Her own unique and truly inimitable way.
Amma began giving darshan late in the morning, and finished only
shortly before 6 p.m. Finished? Not exactly. Finished that session,
yes - but not darshan actually. After barely an hour and a half's
break, Mother returned, this time to the temple, for bhajans and
Devi Bhava. Resplendent in a white-with-gold sari, which She traditionally
wears for the Birthday Devi Bhava, Mother sat for yet another ten
hours of hugging and holding and comforting - now, Devi darshan.
Only after the sun was well up on Wednesday morning did Amma finally
leave the temple and make Her way, smiling radiantly, back across
the yard, up Her steps, and into Her room. So it was a day very
different from most days for ashramites: their jobs were different
and they hardly saw Mother at all except in their hearts. But for
Mother it wasn't really all that different. She spent it more or
less as She spends all Her days: reaching out to meet the needs
of Her children, and making it possible for all who approach Her
to experience firsthand the truth of the phrase, "God is Love."
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