The texts from Chapter 11 draw a sharp distinction between those with and without self-knowledge. For individuals lacking self-knowledge, the world is described as strange, and they 'must protect themselves at every moment.' Conversely, for a being with self-knowledge like Sai Baba, this concern is non-existent. Chapter 11 explains that such beings 'find refuge in their own true nature' and are described as 'eternally free, full of bliss, and always of the nature of pure consciousness.' They are constantly immersed in the Self, beyond the duality of pleasure and pain, and are the embodiment of pure bliss.
How does the source describe the nature of a being with self-knowledge, like Sai Baba, in contrast to those without it?
π Chapter 11