The author firmly believes that his personal agency in writing the book is entirely subordinate to divine inspiration from Sainath. In Chapter 2, he makes this clear by stating, "Nothing in this is mine; this is the inspiration of Sainath." He conceptualizes his role as that of a puppet, with Sai Baba as the "puppeteer" who is the ultimate "promoter of speech." The author identifies the very thought of personal authorship, the "I speak" mentality, as ego. He believes the successful completion of the book depends not on his skill but on surrendering this ego, trusting that Baba's "own feet will get it written, driving away all obstacles."
Can you explain the author's perspective on his own agency versus divine inspiration in composing the sacred text?
π Chapter 2