Mani was there, she saw Jamshed in this state. Then he died. He came to me.
All my relatives, my school friends love me. They accept me as the Avatar. You haven't any idea how difficult it was for them to accept me as the Avatar after quarreling with me, playing marbles with me.
Charles Purdom asked, "Will you comment on what you mean by 'to come to me'?"
Baba replied:
To come to me means liberation, experiencing me as I am, no more bondage of births and deaths. But it does not mean the state of a Perfect Master or Perfection. That is only to be attained while alive in the gross body. So if you are not blessed with this state of Perfection [while in the body], at least you can have liberation [after the body drops].
If you just take my name, just at the moment of dropping your body, you will come to me. Yes, anyone. It is not easy to take my name at the very moment of leaving the body. Then you individually experience bliss, infinite bliss. After attaining liberation you continue to experience infinite bliss eternally. Why? Because it belongs to you eternally. You experience what belonged to you eternally. Even spiritual ecstasy cannot be compared with divine bliss. Remember this.
"Should I leave the Barn, Harry?" Baba asked.
Kenmore said, "Baba, aren't you capable of making up your mind yourself?"
"Ben, what do you suggest?"
"Either way you wish," Ben Hayman replied.
Harold Rudd rose and told a funny story. Then Kecha Kashouty offered Baba an "alligator crown" from the women. Baba called Mickey Florsheim over and made him put it on. Mike Loftus followed by telling a joke.
Baba asked Don Stevens and Ivy Duce if they recalled in God Speaks where God is compared to the sun and other planes to earth, air, et cetera. Neither did.
Baba chuckled, commenting, "Isn't it remarkable that Ivy and Don, who had so much to do with the book, cannot remember?"
He asked Charles Purdom if he remembered the metaphor. Purdom said he did, and Baba explained the passage:
