Chapter 36 explains a unique process for how Sai Baba's stories are communicated. The author dismisses his own role and ego, stating that he is merely a vessel. The text explains that the "playful Sai himself takes over and makes his own qualities heard by his devotees through someone." This implies that Baba is the true narrator, using the author and speaker as a pretext or a medium. This divine intervention ensures that the desires of the devotees are fulfilled. Sai Baba's love for his own stories is so great that he constantly provides memories of them, orchestrating their telling to benefit his followers.
How does Sai Baba himself participate in the telling of his own stories, according to this chapter?
๐ Chapter 36