Chapter 35 poetically describes a state of deep devotion where a devotee's perception is completely unified with Sai Baba. The text explains that for such a devotee, the subject of every vision is Sai, the "ocean of mercy." In this state, the "triad of the seen, the seer, and the seeing vanishes, erasing the place of duality." This means the normal separation we feel between ourselves (the seer), the object we are looking at (the seen), and the act of looking (the seeing) dissolves. All three merge into a single, non-dual experience of Sai. This concept extends to other senses as well; the text mentions the triad of the heard, hearer, and hearing also shatters, indicating a complete absorption in Sai where all sensory distinctions collapse into one.
The beginning of the chapter mentions the triad of 'the seen, the seer, and the seeing' vanishing. Can you explain what this means in the context of experiencing Sai?
π Chapter 35