Chapter 35 describes a profound state of devotion where the devotee's entire sensory experience becomes centered on Sai Baba. The text explains that the happiness from a single glance from Sai is so fulfilling that it eliminates the need for food or water, as the glance itself quenches hunger and thirst. This experience extends to all senses: touch, smell, hearing, and taste are all perceived as manifestations of Sai. This leads to the dissolution of the "triad"—the distinction between the seer, the seen, and the act of seeing (or the hearer, the heard, and hearing). When this triad vanishes, the sense of duality is erased, and the devotee attains a state of non-action, or Naishkarmya, where all actions dissolve into service.
The beginning of Chapter 35 talks about a state where a devotee's senses all point to Sai, and things like hunger and thirst disappear. Can you elaborate on this concept of non-duality?
📖 Chapter 35