Chapter 35 offers a profound description of the experience of being with Sai Baba, emphasizing its non-dualistic nature. The author describes being nourished by Sai's glance alone, much like a young tortoise is nourished by its mother's look. The text from this chapter states that this glance was so powerful it could take away all feelings of thirst and hunger. Furthermore, the chapter explains that in Sai's presence, the very distinction between the observer, the observed, and the act of observing would vanish. This transcendence of duality, where "the triad of the seen, the seer, and the seeing vanishes," applied to all senses, including touch, smell, and hearing, where any sensory input would immediately manifest Sai's form.
What does Chapter 35 say about the experience of being in Sai Baba's presence and the nature of his glance?
📖 Chapter 35