Unrelenting Compassion
San Ramon, 8 June 2001
On the cover of the CD that Jason gave Mother a couple of years
ago was the picture of a slim, hauntingly handsome young man. There
was something ethereal in his innocent face. He held an electric
guitar. He was a rock guitarist. His songs had titles like "Primal"
and "End of the Beginning" and "Meet me in the Morning".
When She listened to the CD on a walkman in the car on the way back
from a program, She didnt hear harmoniums and tablas, and
the names of God. She heard an electric keyboard, an electric guitar
and bass and snare drums; She heard a classical orchestra, and angelic
voices, and She also heard the vibrant shocks of hard rock. These
were Jasons songs, and this was his playing
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The next day, when the morning program was almost over, Jason
came for darshan. Mother stood and walked over to where he
lay flat on his back. She leaned over and stroked his sallow
forehead, and then left Her Hand resting on his long hair.
She was gazing steadily into his eyes, loving him. She bent
over and kissed his forehead, and ran Her Hands down his thin
shoulders to his hands, long, graceful pale hands, which did
not move to respond.
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His fingernails were painted shocking blue, but the fingers no
longer plucked guitar strings. Mother knew what to do next: She
pushed the button on a small tape player on his lap, and raspy strains
of "Amma Amma Taye" broke the otherwise pin-drop silence.
She laughed delightedly, and he moved his eyes a fraction. Mother
took some sacred ash and poured it over his hands; She caressed
it onto the backs of his hands and all down the limp fingers. She
rested Her Hands there for some time, again gazing into his eyes.
She reached towards the prasad plate and grasped a shiny red apple,
which She deposited on his lap, nestling it between the still hands.
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A silver-wrapped Hersheys chocolate Kiss She unwrapped
for this son, and She brought it close to his mouth, which
could not open to accept it. Gently She pushed it into the
corner of his mouth, and he had the joy of a dream coming
truehow long had he wished She would feed him with Her
own Hand?
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Squatting down on the floor at the opposite end of his chair/bed,
Mother began caressing his heavily wrapped feetfeet that could
no longer dance. Feet that no longer moved. She looked so small
there, holding lifeless feet while Her Face bore a look no one understands,
something of compassion, of course, and of love, and of some other
mysterious experience that probably only another Mahatma can understand.
Mother stood, returned to Jasons still face, leaned over
and whispered into his ear. With the tiniest of subtle movements
of his eyes, Jason spelled out what he wanted to say to Mother,
and his friend and helper "translated" for Her. Another
long slow gaze from this Mother to Her son, another soft caress.
Tears filled Her eyes and She wiped them away with Her sari. She
made a strange gesturealmost like a shrug of helplessness.
She kissed him again, and left the hall.
That was two years ago, and Jason had been coming to see Mother
for two years already. Before he knew Her, he was a electric guitar
player until the degenerative disease ALS (also known as Lou
Gehrigs Disease) struck and left him almost but not quite
lifeless. His body became like a limp rag, steadily, inexorably
wasting away. Like many people, he first came to Mother with dreams
of a healing, for there have been cases of people becoming whole
by Her graceor, as She humbly says, somehow it sometimes happens,
due to their strong faith.
The year is now 2001; Jason has been coming to Mother for four
years. He feels useless; he is sad about the suffering his parents
experience because of his condition. He yearns to be up and active,
to have a purpose, to find excitement in life. To move to the beat
of music like that he used to play. Hasnt he suffered enough?
Will Mother heal him now?
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Every time that he comes for darshan nowwhich is at
the end of most morning programs in San Ramonpeople
who have known him for years or who are seeing him now for
the first time, watch intently. They see the depth of connection
between Jason and Amma when their gazes lock. They see the
laughter in both pairs of eyes when Jason surprises Mother
with what hes chosen for his tape player.
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They see the delight in both pairs of eyes when She takes from
his lap the gift he has brought her a flower or a piece of
fruit. They see the tears in both pairs of eyes when his frustration
and fear and pain are too much, and She feels them with him, within
Her.
The watchers keep waiting for the miracle. It would be spectacular
if She suddenly told him to standto sing, to dance! Why not?
Didnt She suck the pus from Dattan the Lepers wounds
until he was healed?
Why not? Does it mean She doesnt, after all, love him? Unimaginable,
if you see the penetrating gazes She gives him, and Her Tears. We
know things Mother has said: we need to exhaust our prarabdha karmas.
Mahatmas usually let themselves be bound by the laws of the universe;
miracles don't breed so much faith as the desire for more miracles.
And so forth.
How must it feel to be young and of sound mind, like Jason, and
to be exhausted with the depression of burdening others and of feeling
you have no purpose and no hope? How can She let him go on in such
painsuch physical and mental and emotional and spiritual pain?
Its because of love. It is Her absolute compassion. It is
when we are NOT rescued and yet do not give up, and when we are
NOT relieved and yet keep faith, and when we are NOT coddled and
yet do not turn away that our souls are stretched beyond the limits
they seem to us to have. When our souls are stretched like that
we are growing closer and closer to what ultimately we are meant
to become. What loving mother would not do all in her power to help
her darling child reach such a Goal? Is Mother less than such a
mother?
Not every person is able to grow from such immense suffering; most
of us are limited to the slower-paced but more humane curriculum
of smaller illnesses and disappointments from which we can ultimately
recuperate and say, "Well, it wasnt something Id
have chosen, but I see how it helped me grow." Mother must
surely calculate very carefully just how much each of us can sustainwhat
mother wouldnt? We know She sometimes thinks we can take more
than WE think we can take (but since weve survived to find
that out, then wasnt She, after all right?). For those who
are capable, Mother will provide the advanced and accelerated curriculum.
What potential, Mother must see in Jason, and how relentless must
be Her compassion.
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