Before sleep, a disciple asked, “Sir, how long must I meditate?” I answered: “How long do you hold your breath underwater when afraid?” He looked puzzled. I explained: “Not long. But if pearls lay at the bottom, you would learn to stay. Find the pearl. Then duration vanishes.” He left lighter. I closed my eyes. The Ganges inside never stops flowing.

A railway official, proud, asked in broken Hindi: “You sit all day. What do you do ?” I replied: “I watch the train of thoughts. You watch the train of coal. Both are Maya. But one knows it.” He scoffed. Before leaving, he asked secretly: “Can I meditate without leaving my job?” I laughed — the first sound in three hours. “My son,” I said, “the Ganges flows whether you wear a uniform or a rag. Sit like a king inside. The office is your ashram.” lahiri mahasaya diary

My body is tired. Not the Self. Today a young monk came — tall, burning, named Yogananda . He asked for kriya. I gave it. As he left, I whispered to the wall: He will carry the Ganges to the West. Then I ate simple rice, lay down, and told my family: “Do not cry. I am only going to the next room. The diary ends. The writing never began.” Closing note (editorial): Lahiri Mahasaya never actually kept a written diary. He discouraged outward recording, saying, “The true diary is kept in the stillness between breaths.” The above is a reverent imagining — a garland of silence placed on the feet of the yogi who taught householders to find God without renouncing a single duty. Before sleep, a disciple asked, “Sir, how long

Not with words, but with darshan . Today a man came crawling, his legs twisted since birth. He did not ask for a miracle. He asked, “How to bear this quietly?” I looked at him. The Babaji within me looked through these eyes. Something passed — not a cure, but a stilling. He rose and walked three steps. Then wept. I said nothing. The Guru does nothing. The Self does all. Find the pearl

(Fragments of a silent life)