We can agree he had a sense of humor, was a prolific writer, and managed to get his work published widely. If he were so scholarly, he surely would have seen all the relevant old materials that you dug up readily at a quite a distance from that ancient land.
So he would have been aware of the rewriting of history. Also an active participant. In addition to Adi-Dev, Jagdish-bhai who wrote the language for the text-filled teaching posters of Creator and His Creation and Human World Tree. It's not that Shiva gave the text. Jagdish-bhai with Lehkraj's supervision, wrote the text from Shiva's point of view.
"Dearest Children!" it begins.
The BKs have always talked about the changing knowledge, 'previously you believed this one was god'
It is interesting that Dada Lehkraj heavily emphasized attention to eating. I am reading a chapter 'Concentrating on Eating' in a book entitled Ego, Hunger and Aggression by Fritz Perls.
He writes about the difficult and importance of being continually aware of the movements that one during eating including lips, tongue, teeth, jaw, how long one chews, does one fully liquify the food, or does one swallow food in unbroken lumps. The process of eating relates to the way we digest our other life experiences. Biting off with our teeth and chewing, cutting, reducing and digesting as nourishment for expressing our total self.
So, I wonder what 'remembering Baba' meant to Lehkraj. Perhaps the richness in his personality was nourished by a care and consciousness in eating. Sensory richness that was reflected an intense aliveness and passion.
'Eating in remembrance' can be something entirely different, fully the flavor of the self, not the future perfect idealized self, the - present - multidimensional self, wounded healer self, adult child self.
So he would have been aware of the rewriting of history. Also an active participant. In addition to Adi-Dev, Jagdish-bhai who wrote the language for the text-filled teaching posters of Creator and His Creation and Human World Tree. It's not that Shiva gave the text. Jagdish-bhai with Lehkraj's supervision, wrote the text from Shiva's point of view.
"Dearest Children!" it begins.
The BKs have always talked about the changing knowledge, 'previously you believed this one was god'
It is interesting that Dada Lehkraj heavily emphasized attention to eating. I am reading a chapter 'Concentrating on Eating' in a book entitled Ego, Hunger and Aggression by Fritz Perls.
He writes about the difficult and importance of being continually aware of the movements that one during eating including lips, tongue, teeth, jaw, how long one chews, does one fully liquify the food, or does one swallow food in unbroken lumps. The process of eating relates to the way we digest our other life experiences. Biting off with our teeth and chewing, cutting, reducing and digesting as nourishment for expressing our total self.
So, I wonder what 'remembering Baba' meant to Lehkraj. Perhaps the richness in his personality was nourished by a care and consciousness in eating. Sensory richness that was reflected an intense aliveness and passion.
'Eating in remembrance' can be something entirely different, fully the flavor of the self, not the future perfect idealized self, the - present - multidimensional self, wounded healer self, adult child self.