In Chapter 24, the narrator expresses profound humility regarding their role as the storyteller. They state that the very act of saying 'I narrate' is a form of ego, and that one must be egoless at the Guru's feet for the stream of the story to flow. The author attributes the words they write not to their own intellect but to Sai Samarth, whom they call the 'stimulator of intellect.' This perspective, as detailed in Chapter 24, highlights a key aspect of the guru-disciple relationship: the disciple is merely a vessel, and true wisdom and expression flow from the Guru. It emphasizes that humility and the surrender of ego are prerequisites for receiving and transmitting spiritual knowledge.
Based on Chapter 24, what is the narrator's perspective on their own role in telling these stories, and what does this reveal about the nature of a guru-disciple relationship?
๐ Chapter 24