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Autobiography of a Yogi by Paramhansa Yogananda
Chapter 20: We Do Not Visit Kashmir"Father, I want to invite Master and four friends to accompany me to the Himalayan foothills during my summer vacation. May I have six train passes to Kashmir and enough money to cover our travel expenses?"
As I had expected, Father laughed heartily. "This is the third time you have given me the same cock-and-bull story. Didn't you make a similar request last summer, and the year before that? At the last moment, Sri Yukteswarji refuses to go."
"It
is true, Father; I don't know why my guru will not give me his definite
word about Kashmir.1
But if I tell
him that I have already secured the passes from you, somehow I think
that this time he will consent to make the journey."
Father was unconvinced
at the moment, but the following day, after some good-humored gibes,
he handed me six passes and a roll of ten-rupee bills.
"I hardly
think your theoretical trip needs such practical props," he
remarked, "but here they are."
That afternoon
I exhibited my booty to Sri Yukteswar. Though he smiled at my enthusiasm,
his words were noncommittal: "I would like to go; we shall
see." He made no comment when I asked his little hermitage
disciple, Kanai, to accompany us. I also invited three other friendsRajendra
Nath Mitra, Jotin Auddy, and one other boy. Our date of departure
was set for the following Monday.
On Saturday
and Sunday I stayed in Calcutta, where marriage rites for a cousin
were being celebrated at my family home. I arrived in Serampore
with my luggage early Monday morning. Rajendra met me at the hermitage
door.
"Master
is out, walking. He has refused to go."
I was equally
grieved and obdurate. "I will not give Father a third chance
to ridicule my chimerical plans for Kashmir. Come; the rest of us
will go anyhow."
Rajendra agreed;
I left the ashram to find a servant. Kanai, I knew, would not take
the trip without Master, and someone was needed to look after the
luggage. I bethought myself of Behari, previously a servant in my
family home, who was now employed by a Serampore schoolmaster. As
I walked along briskly, I met my guru in front of the Christian
church near Serampore Courthouse.
"Where
are you going?" Sri Yukteswar's face was unsmiling.
"Sir, I
hear that you and Kanai will not take the trip we have been planning.
I am seeking Behari. You will recall that last year he was so anxious
to see Kashmir that he even offered to serve without pay."
"I remember.
Nevertheless, I don't think Behari will be willing to go."
I was exasperated.
"He is just eagerly waiting for this opportunity!"
My guru silently
resumed his walk; I soon reached the schoolmaster's house. Behari,
in the courtyard, greeted me with a friendly warmth that abruptly
vanished as soon as I mentioned Kashmir. With a murmured word of
apology, the servant left me and entered his employer's house. I
waited half an hour, nervously assuring myself that Behari's delay
was being caused by preparations for his trip. Finally I knocked
at the front door.
"Behari
left by the back stairs about thirty minutes ago," a man informed
me. A slight smile hovered about his lips.
I departed sadly,
wondering whether my invitation had been too coercive or whether
Master's unseen influence were at work. Passing the Christian church,
again I saw my guru walking slowly toward me. Without waiting to
hear my report, he exclaimed:
"So Behari
would not go! Now, what are your plans?"
I felt like
a recalcitrant child who is determined to defy his masterful father.
"Sir, I am going to ask my uncle to lend me his servant, Lal
Dhari."
"See your
uncle if you want to," Sri Yukteswar replied with a chuckle.
"But I hardly think you will enjoy the visit."
Apprehensive
but rebellious, I left my guru and entered Serampore Courthouse.
My paternal uncle, Sarada Ghosh, a government attorney, welcomed
me affectionately.
"I am leaving
today with some friends for Kashmir," I told him. "For
years I have been looking forward to this Himalayan trip."
"I am happy
for you, Mukunda. Is there anything I can do to make your journey
more comfortable?"
These kind words
gave me a lift of encouragement. "Dear uncle," I said,
"could you possibly spare me your servant, Lal Dhari?"
My simple request
had the effect of an earthquake. Uncle jumped so violently that
his chair overturned, the papers on the desk flew in every direction,
and his pipe, a long, coconut-stemmed hubble-bubble, fell to the
floor with a great clatter.
"You selfish
young man," he shouted, quivering with wrath, "what a
preposterous idea! Who will look after me, if you take my servant
on one of your pleasure jaunts?"
I concealed
my surprise, reflecting that my amiable uncle's sudden change of
front was only one more enigma in a day fully devoted to incomprehensibility.
My retreat from the courthouse office was more alacritous than dignified.
I returned to
the hermitage, where my friends were expectantly gathered. Conviction
was growing on me that some sufficient if exceedingly recondite
motive was behind Master's attitude. Remorse seized me that I had
been trying to thwart my guru's will.
"Mukunda,
wouldn't you like to stay awhile longer with me?" Sri Yukteswar
inquired. "Rajendra and the others can go ahead now, and wait
for you at Calcutta. There will be plenty of time to catch the last
evening train leaving Calcutta for Kashmir."
"Sir,
I don't care to go without you," I said mournfully.
My friends paid
not the slightest attention to my remark. They summoned a hackney
carriage and departed with all the luggage. Kanai and I sat quietly
at our guru's feet. After a half hour of complete silence, Master
rose and walked toward the second-floor dining patio.
"Kanai,
please serve Mukunda's food. His train leaves soon."
Getting up from
my blanket seat, I staggered suddenly with nausea and a ghastly
churning sensation in my stomach. The stabbing pain was so intense
that I felt I had been abruptly hurled into some violent hell. Groping
blindly toward my guru, I collapsed before him, attacked by all
symptoms of the dread Asiatic cholera. Sri Yukteswar and Kanai carried
me to the sitting room.
Racked with
agony, I cried, "Master, I surrender my life to you;"
for I believed it was indeed fast ebbing from the shores of my body.
Sri Yukteswar
put my head on his lap, stroking my forehead with angelic tenderness.
"You see
now what would have happened if you were at the station with your
friends," he said. "I had to look after you in this strange
way, because you chose to doubt my judgment about taking the trip
at this particular time."
I understood
at last. Inasmuch as great masters seldom see fit to display their
powers openly, a casual observer of the day's events would have
imagined that their sequence was quite natural. My guru's intervention
had been too subtle to be suspected. He had worked his will through
Behari and my Uncle Sarada and Rajendra and the others in such an
inconspicuous manner that probably everyone but myself thought the
situations had been logically normal.
As Sri Yukteswar
never failed to observe his social obligations, he instructed Kanai
to go for a specialist, and to notify my uncle.
"Master,"
I protested, "only you can heal me. I am too far gone for any
doctor."
"Child,
you are protected by the Divine Mercy. Don't worry about the doctor;
he will not find you in this state. You are already healed."
With my guru's
words, the excruciating suffering left me. I sat up feebly. A doctor
soon arrived and examined me carefully.
"You appear
to have passed through the worst," he said. "I will take
some specimens with me for laboratory tests."
The following
morning the physician arrived hurriedly. I was sitting up, in good
spirits.
"Well,
well, here you are, smiling and chatting as though you had had no
close call with death." He patted my hand gently. "I hardly
expected to find you alive, after I had discovered from the specimens
that your disease was Asiatic cholera. You are fortunate, young
man, to have a guru with divine healing powers! I am convinced of
it!"
I agreed wholeheartedly.
As the doctor was preparing to leave, Rajendra and Auddy appeared
at the door. The resentment in their faces changed into sympathy
as they glanced at the physician and then at my somewhat wan countenance.
"We were
angry when you didn't turn up as agreed at the Calcutta train. You
have been sick?"
"Yes."
I could not help laughing as my friends placed the luggage in the
same corner it had occupied yesterday. I quoted: "There was
a ship that went to Spain; when it arrived, it came back again!"
Master
entered the room. I permitted myself a convalescent's liberty, and
captured his hand lovingly.
"Guruji," I said, "from my twelfth year on, I have made many unsuccessful attempts to reach the Himalayas. I am finally convinced that without your blessings the Goddess Parvati2 will not receive me!"
1 Although Master failed to make any explanation,
his reluctance to visit Kashmir during those two summers may have
been a foreknowledge that the time was not ripe for his illness
there (see pp. 208 f.).
Back to text
2
Literally, "of the mountains." Parvati, mythologically
represented as a daughter of Himavat or the sacred mountains, is
a name given to the shakti or "consort" of Shiva.
Back to text
Contents |
Preface 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | 36 | 37 | 38 | 39 | 40: 41 | 42 | 43 | 44 | 45 | 46 | 47 | 48 |
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