Chapter 36 portrays Sai Baba as being completely detached from the ego or "I-ness." The narrator states that the "playful Sai himself takes over and makes his own qualities heard by his devotees through someone," rendering the speaker's ego irrelevant. It emphasizes that Sai is indifferent to the "I am He" (So-ham) attitude and has "no name or village," yet possesses infinite glory. Furthermore, the text mentions that he stays "distant and detached from his name" while orchestrating various events, showing that his power and actions are not tied to any conventional sense of personal identity or worldly attachment.
How does Chapter 36 describe Sai Baba's relationship with ego and personal identity?
π Chapter 36