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Articles

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

All (Baba) Things Considered

1969

For Baba people, there's only one date in 1969 they'll never forget. There was a lot going on in the world that year, but I certainly don't remember what any of it was. Except for January 31 and the phone call that came early that morning: "Meher Baba has dropped his body."

My first reaction was, "Well, I'll be darned; he did it!" My second, immediate reaction was, "Well, now he's free and he's with me." Because that feeling was so strong, I cancelled my plans to go to the 1969 Darshan, and instead went to Ireland, Switzerland and Greece.

When I got to Greece, I went up to Delphi, home of the Greek oracle. It was supposed to be a day trip, but a friend and I decided to stay overnight. We checked into a hotel overlooking the steep valley that led down to the sea. It was off-season and there were only two other people in the hotel. That overnight confirmed my conviction that Meher Baba had shed his "overcoat" and was now loose in the world and reachable in every nook and cranny of the universe. Never have I felt his presence more powerfully than I did that night. At last, I was no longer separated from him by thousands of miles. On the contrary, he had come on this trip with me, giving me his darshan every minute of every hour. We have, so to speak, been travelling together ever since.

I didn't go back to India until 1971. When I went up the hill that first day and stepped into the Samadhi, I burst into tears. It was my first emotional reaction to Baba's dropping his body. I realized that even though I knew now he was always with me, I also desperately wanted to see him in his human form. And he wasn't there. Contradictory, I suppose, but that's the way it was. I told Mansari about it and she told me her wonderful story about the Samadhi: at some point after Baba's body was laid to rest in the tomb, she saw him get up and walk out the door. Loose in the world, indeed.

It was the next day that I saw Mehera for the first time since 1962, and her grief broke my heart. The memory of it still does. I can't imagine what it was like to see that grief in 1969 and I'm glad I didn't.

I haven't told this 1969 story to very many people, because it's hard. It's been hard to write about, as well, but I feel that if I didn't, I'd be leaving out a very important part of my life with Meher Baba, one that has colored my relationship with him over all the years that have followed.