Playful Darshan
17 - 27 April 2001, Australia
In case you thought spirituality was only sombre, reconsider. Observe
Mother's darshan programs, especially in the West, where smaller
crowds allow time for Mother's playfulness to surface even more
than usual!
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The first night after the group's arrival in Australia, Mother
had great fun talking about the adventures of the tour group
with the Customs people at the airport. Because of Australia's
fragile ecosystem, immigration authorities must be extremely
strict and thorough. One of Mother's son's forgot to mention
that he had three carrots in his kit - "Organic carrots,"
he was saying later, in explanation: such precious things!
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He was held for questioning for three hours! Mother kept looking
at him and laughing and saying, "Three carrots!" She pointed
out that Lakshmi had declared a cake she was carrying for Mother,
and they had let her through; perhaps people were meant to understand
that cakes are better than carrots - even organic ones! One of the
women in the group had not declared that she was bringing in "wood
products". It hadn't occurred to her that the harmonium was
of wood! Mother found that laughable, and there was a little discussion
of keeping a harmonium in Australia for the future, to avoid complications
at immigration.
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There were times She would call the people travelling with
Her (who otherwise don't go) for darshan, and She would casually
play with them. She would ask the Finnish boy to dance, and
whether the music was "Nila Nila" (fast and frantic)
or "Om Amriteshwaryai Namaha" (slow, soft and meditative),
he would take his position, go almost into a trance, and improvise
to the music
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Sometimes She would be talking and laughing, teasing someone who
wanted to become a brahmachari about how hard the life would be,
or warning someone else about what foods are good to eat and what
ones are not. "You sick?" She'd inquire, and then shake
with laughter when a good number of hands would go up, admitting
to stomach upset from all the rich foods.
One night, just before the end of the tour, the girls travelling
with Mother decided to perform a dance, which one of them, a classical
Indian dancer had choreographed, to one of the newer bhajans. A
space on the floor (where Mother could see) was cleared, the music
started, and could you call them classical Indian rock stars? Mother
risked falling out of Her chair, complete with some lucky person
on Her lap, as She rolled from side to side, laughing and pointing.
The boys in the tour group, not to be left out, put together their
own dance performance for the next night. As is often done for classical
Indian dance, they first demonstrated each movement, "translating"
it, so that the uninitiated could understand the story. Then the
music burst forth, they danced with exuberant energy, and Mother
was again at risk of falling from Her chair!
There were the babies whom She let play with Her nose ring, the
two-year-olds whose eyes would move unashamedly from Her Face to
the tray of chocolates beside Her. To them She would offer a sweet
- only to draw it back just as they reached, a game of laughter
and frustration played just until it would have been too much for
the youngster, and then She would relent, unwrap the sweet, and
pop it into the open mouth. There were bigger children (say in their
forties or fifties) who whispered to Mother that it was their birthday:
She might stuff their ears with flower petals, shower petals over
their heads, and make them bite into an apple of which She would
then let go! They were reduced to grabbing it before it fell or
else holding it with their teeth - such loss of dignity.
Mother has said that when She hugs us, She is trying to awaken
the "motherhood" dormant within us, that loving, compassionate,
patient Inner Mother that She says we all need to bring more to
the surface. Men and women alike, She says, need to develop this
quality. So Mother's darshan has a very serious purpose; isn't it
lovely that serious needn't be attended by sombre?
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