Ordinary Life
– Juniper Downs
Baba Loved Us Too
– Wendy Connor
Feeling His Love
– Steve Klein
He is both Father and Mother
– Juniper Downs
A Leap of Faith
– Wendy Connor
Becoming His
– Steve Klein
Don't Worry, Be Happy
– Juniper Downs
A Life Worth Living
– Wendy Connor
Love The One You're With
– Steve Klein
What a Mighty Beloved our Beloved is
– Wendy Connor
To thine own self be true?
– Steve Klein
The Sweets of His Love
– Wendy Connor
Sickness and Health
– Juniper Downs
Giving Advice
– Steve Klein
"Garlic-Faced"
– Wendy Connor
To Love and Be Loved
– Juniper Downs
Talking About The Truth
– Steve Klein
The Script was Written Long Ago
– Wendy Connor
Excuse Me, Which Way to God?
– Steve Klein
Letting Go
– Juniper Downs
The Mosquitoes are Bad Today
– Wendy Connor
What If A Teaching Moment Never Comes?
– Steve Klein
Beads On One String
– Juniper Downs
Youth Sahavas '07
– Wendy Connor
Stop, You're Both Right!
– Steve Klein
God, Please Give me a Job
– Juniper Downs
"It Just Passes More Quickly"
– Wendy Connor
Multiple Meher Babas
– Steve Klein
The Treasure Within
– Wendy Connor
Winking Back
– Juniper Downs
Holding On, But Losing One's Grip
– Steve Klein
1969
– Ann Conlon
Obedience
– Ann Conlon
Meher Center – The Way It Was
– Ann Conlon
Armageddon, Anyone?
– Ann Conlon
What Does Baba Want Me to Do?
– Ann Conlon
Baba's 'Things'
– Ann Conlon
The Way It Was – Meherabad
– Ann Conlon
What Does THAT Mean?
– Ann Conlon
Doing "Baba Work"
– Ann Conlon
Broken Heads
– Ann Conlon
On Being Ill
– Ann Conlon
Enid
– Ann Conlon
To Each His Own
– Ann Conlon
Meherjee
– Ann Conlon
Youth Sahavas
– Ann Conlon
Kitty
– Ann Conlon
The Lonely Path
– Ann Conlon
Isn't He Enough?
– Ann Conlon
Goher
– Ann Conlon
He Said What?
– Ann Conlon
Seeking Suffering
– Ann Conlon
Taking a Dare
– Ann Conlon
Dreams
– Ann Conlon
Amartithi
– Ann Conlon
Margaret
– Ann Conlon
"The Disciple"
– Ann Conlon
I Wonder ...
– Ann Conlon
Backbiting, etc.
– Ann Conlon
Rites, Rituals and Ceremonies
– Ann Conlon
Hearing His Name
– Ann Conlon
"Baba's Group"
– Ann Conlon
His Promise
– Ann Conlon
Then and Now
– Ann Conlon
Middlemen Revisited
– Ann Conlon
Padri
– Ann Conlon
Gateway Days
– Ann Conlon
The New Life
– Ann Conlon
Books, Books and More Books
– Ann Conlon
His "Last Warning"
– Ann Conlon
Elizabeth Patterson
– Ann Conlon
Detachment
– Ann Conlon
Is That A Religion Coming?
– Ann Conlon
Manifestation: Did He Or Didn't He?
– Ann Conlon
A Country of Our Own?
– Ann Conlon
Remembering Mohammed
– Ann Conlon
Advice (Sort-Of) for Newcomers
– Ann Conlon
You're a Baba Lover If...
– Ann Conlon
Real Happiness
– Ann Conlon
Baba Lover, Baba Follower or Both?
– Ann Conlon
Meherazad – The Way It Was
– Ann Conlon
The Strongest Memories
– Ann Conlon
Taking a Dare
Meher Baba loved people who dared, who were willing to take risks even if they had no way of knowing they'd win anything.
I suppose that's what we're all doing with Baba -- risking it all in the belief that we'll eventually win him. But when we start we don't really know if there's anything to win, do we? And that's taking the biggest dare of all.
When I think of daring people, though, I'm more apt to go back to the mandali in India and to those early Westerners who defied all conventions to seize the "dare" and run with it. People like Kitty Davy, Margaret Craske, Delia DeLeon, the Becketts who sailed for India in 1937 expecting to stay with Baba for many years, perhaps the rest of their lives. He sent them back to England within a month or so, to face the cynical and critical British press and have their story and their pictures plastered all over the country's newspapers. Can you imagine having to handle that one? They did and went on to dedicate the rest of their lives to Meher Baba.
I once talked to an early ballet student of Margaret Craske's who told me all Margaret's students were horrified when she and Mabel Ryan left their school in London and went off to India. She said the story that went around said Margaret had sold her very valuable school and given all the money to Meher Baba. Not true, by the way. She gave the school to a former student, Peggy van Praagh and went to India with only a 10 pound note in her shoe.
And then there were some of the early mandali, who ignored the criticism of families and friends to leave all and follow him, literally into the wilderness, so strong were their convictions. I guess that's the key to taking risks, to being daring: total conviction, the sense that what one is doing is right, and no doubts are to be entertained.
That conviction has shown up in later generations of Baba lovers: the Westerners who flew to India in 1961 on a moment's notice for the chance to have five minutes with Baba, a trip which Baba called "a test of the daring of the lover;" the young sisters who stood up to raging parents in order to follow Baba; the many Baba lovers who, through circumstances, go it alone with Baba, with no support from peers; the Indian gypsies who walked a thousand miles to have a few moments in Meher Baba's presence in 1962.
Daring then is the mark of the true Baba lover. And no matter how nutty that may seem to others, it is what makes us -- us!