Chapter 35 provides a profound insight into the author's personal experience of non-duality with Sai Baba. The author describes being nourished by Sai's glance alone, which eliminates hunger and thirst. This leads to a state where the distinction between the observer and the observed dissolves. The text explains this as the "triad of the seen, the seer, and the seeing vanishes, erasing the place of duality." This experience of oneness is not limited to sight; the chapter states this unity is also felt through touch, smell, and hearing, where encountering any sensory input immediately manifests Sai's form and shatters the triad of subject, object, and the act of perception.
What does Chapter 35 say about the author's experience of non-duality in relation to Sai Baba?
๐ Chapter 35