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Years with Yogananda
Kriyananda offers sweetmeats to Yogananda “I want to be your disciple.”In 1948 Swami Kriyananda found Yogananda’s now famous Autobiography of a Yogi in New York city, and left on a bus the next day to meet the saint who he felt “was the truest friend I had ever known.” The day he arrived in Los Angeles, he was blessed to meet the Master. Referring to the feminine aspect of God, Yogananda said, “I agreed to see you only because Divine Mother told me to.” Responding to an irrestible longing in his heart, Kriyananda said to the yogi, “I want to be your disciple.” This was the most important moment in Kriyananda’s life, for in this moment he asked for help from one who could fully give it: a true guru, one united with God. That day Yogananda accepted him as a disciple, and Kriyananda began a new life in search of divine joy. Studying the Guru’s TeachingsKriyananda dived headlong into Yogananda’s teachings and meditation techniques, seeking attunement above all with the great yogi’s consciouness. In time, Kriyananda found himself becoming transformed from within. Before a year had passed, Yogananda asked him to conduct a Sunday Service in his place, and afterwards to teach Kriya Yoga, the highest technique of raja yoga. This was the “sink or swim” training technique. During his first public talk, Kriyananda felt so bad for everyone (who had expected Yogananda instead) that he wasn’t even nervous! In the years that followed, the Master continued to have him conduct services and give Kriya Yoga initiations.
“You have a great work to do.”
Swami Kriyananda as a young minister “Your work,” Yogananda told Kriyananda, “is writing, editing, and lecturing.” In 1950 he asked Kriyananda to take charge and organize the monks, most of whom were many years older than him! In that same year, Yogananda invited him to his seclusion retreat at 29 Palms. Here Kriyananda worked closely with Yogananda, and had the opportunity to record much of what he said, which Kriyananda later compiled as part of Conversations with Yogananda. Many times the guru told Kriyananda, “You have a great work to do,” and also, “You must do such and such, because you have a great work to do.” This, Kriyananda knew, was not praise, but a serious commission to help bring Yogananda’s teachings into the world. Since that time, Swami Kriyananda has:
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Published by Ananda Sangha, Copyright 2005 – 2008 530-478-7560 | sanghainfo@ananda.org |