The Beloved's Beloved
– Wendy Connor
Compare and Contrast
– Steve Klein
It's in the struggle . . .
– Jenny Keating
Time
– Juniper Lesnik
The Tipping Point
– Billy Goodrum
Learning Poise
– Bruce Felknor
When "Good Enough" Isn't
– Steve Klein
Conflict and Joy
– Jenny Keating
Sleepless in San Jose
– Juniper Lesnik
Vacation Incarnation
– Steve Klein
Nerve Endings of the Soul
– Jenny Keating
"Let the World Wait"
– Wendy Connor
Religion vs Spirituality
– Steve Klein
The Bigger Challenge
– Wendy Connor
Que Sera Sera
– Steve Klein
To Be Honest
– Juniper Lesnik
Praise and Blame
– Steve Klein
Being Right
– Steve Klein
To Love God is To Love Our Fellow Beings
– Juniper Lesnik
God is Alive in the World
– Wendy Connor
Determined to Be His
– Steve Klein
The Stuff We're Made Of
– Juniper Lesnik
"I Will Always Be With You": Memories of the East West Gathering
– Wendy Connor
Half Full or Half Empty?
– Steve Klein
Love The One You're With
– Steve Klein
Ordinary Life
– Juniper Lesnik
Baba Loved Us Too
– Wendy Connor
Feeling His Love
– Steve Klein
He is both Father and Mother
– Juniper Lesnik
A Leap of Faith
– Wendy Connor
Becoming His
– Steve Klein
Don't Worry, Be Happy
– Juniper Lesnik
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 Lesnik
Giving Advice
– Steve Klein
"Garlic-Faced"
– Wendy Connor
To Love and Be Loved
– Juniper Lesnik
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 Lesnik
The Mosquitoes are Bad Today
– Wendy Connor
What If A Teaching Moment Never Comes?
– Steve Klein
Beads On One String
– Juniper Lesnik
Youth Sahavas '07
– Wendy Connor
Stop, You're Both Right!
– Steve Klein
God, Please Give me a Job
– Juniper Lesnik
"It Just Passes More Quickly"
– Wendy Connor
Multiple Meher Babas
– Steve Klein
Winking Back
– Juniper Lesnik
The Treasure Within
– Wendy Connor
Holding On, But Losing One's Grip
– Steve Klein
1969
– Ann Conlon
Obedience
– Ann Conlon
Armageddon, Anyone?
– Ann Conlon
Meher Center – The Way It Was
– 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
Broken Heads
– Ann Conlon
Doing "Baba Work"
– Ann Conlon
Enid
– Ann Conlon
On Being Ill
– 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
He Said What?
– Ann Conlon
Goher
– 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
A Country of Our Own?
– Ann Conlon
Manifestation: Did He Or Didn't He?
– 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
Meher Center – The Way It Was
I first came to the Meher Spiritual Center with a friend in the summer of 1958, a few weeks after Meher Baba had left.
At the time, in order to enter, you called Elizabeth Patterson for reservations and when you got within a few miles on the day of your arrival, you called again. And Elizabeth and Kitty drove up to the gate from their home, Youpon Dunes, in Myrtle Beach. There was no Gateway, so the guest book and the keys were kept at Pine Lodge. We learned the rules verbally from Elizabeth: wear closed shoes; don't go to the beach alone; carry a flashlight at night. And an extra suggestion for me, with my Irish-fair skin: "You'd better get your tan by the light of the moon."
There was no one else there at the time; there were no programs, no guided tours, no maps, no film nights and no guest speakers. There was only one staff person — the night watchman Frank Eaton. And there was Kitty, who by Baba's order had to sleep at the Center each night when a new person (in this case, me) was there.
There was one thing that hasn't changed over more than forty years: Meher Baba's presence. It is as strong and as sweet now as it was then. He has certainly kept the promise he made all those years ago, "I never come and I never go." And there are times when the sense of his presence is so powerful that one expects him to come striding along a path at any moment.
In 1958, the Center was truly a place for "rest, meditation and renewal of the spiritual life." No distractions, certainly. The days were quiet, peaceful, with hours spent on the beach, in the Barn and the Lagoon Cabin.
Each evening, Kitty let us know that she had arrived and we joined her on the Lake Cabin porch. She asked about our lives and talked about Baba, we watched the moon come up over Long Lake, and listened to the tree frogs every evening for a week. Years later, one stood in line on the Dilruba porch to have a few minutes with Kitty.
There was lunch one day with Elizabeth and Kitty and I asked Elizabeth to tell me about meeting Baba. She became flustered and said she couldn't just tell it with no warning. I dropped the subject in a hurry and instead asked what it was like to go to the North Pole, which she had done aboard a Russian icebreaker. In answering, she gave me her Baba story in one sentence: "It was the purest thing I ever saw until I met Meher Baba."
The Center itself was neat and beautifully kept, even though there was no grounds crew. Elizabeth simply hired workers as needed. Kitty frequently came out in the daytime, once spending hours on her knees planting plugs of grass in the circle outside the Original Kitchen. She also cleaned the cabins, even though we all cleaned up our own cabins before we left.
The library was in Pine Lodge and Baba meetings were also held there. A few years later what films there were of Baba were shown in the screened area off the Original Kitchen, now the Lakeview Kitchen. Baba's House was only open on Sundays, and Kitty served as the tour guide. One Sunday, she was showing the house to a small group of first time visitors when she pointed out the portrait of Baba in the living room and said, "That's how he looked when I first met him." The joy and love on her face at that moment are indescribable.
Of course, I sometimes miss the Center the way it was. On the other hand I know Meher Baba didn't create it for the less-than-a-handful of people who came in those early years. He made it for all "those who love and follow me and for those who know of me and want to know more." The numbers of people have grown, the number of buildings has grown, and so have the staff and the cadre of volunteers. And I have every confidence in Baba's promise that "the Center will be a place of pilgrimage for a thousand years," So we all better take very good care of it, seeing to it that it continues to be his much-loved "home in the West."