Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

Amma's Leadership Style

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

I'm preparing a paper for the Women and Religion Section of the

Western Conference of the American Academy of Religion. It is on

Amma's leadership style. I interviewed Brahmachari Dayamrita on

Saturday on the subject. I'd love to get your thoughts and

experiences about this. Here are my questions. Including personal

experiences is a great help.

 

1. Is Amma's leadership style different from what you experienced

in former spiritual groups/settings? How is it different?

 

2. In what ways does the difference benefit you in your spiritual

development?

 

3. Are there any disadvantages from your poitn of

view?

 

Thanks for your help.

 

In Amma's love,

Aikya

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ammachi, "Aikya Param" <aikya> wrote:

>

> I'm preparing a paper for the Women and Religion Section of the

> Western Conference of the American Academy of Religion. It is on

> Amma's leadership style. I interviewed Brahmachari Dayamrita on

> Saturday on the subject. I'd love to get your thoughts and

> experiences about this. Here are my questions. Including

> personal experiences is a great help.

>

> 1. Is Amma's leadership style different from what you experienced

> in former spiritual groups/settings? How is it different?

 

I was first attracted to Amma when I read that Amma gives hugs, does

not speak and that some people cry a lot. I had to see this because

many years before I experienced my mind drop into my heart resulting

in an indescribable experience of God's Love. Since that experience,

I knew the mind was the culprit and the source of all our suffering.

Amma does speak ~ maybe half hour lecture ~ and then the hugs start

for the rest of the day( up to 30,000 in 22 hrs ). Basically when

Amma hugs someone, She fills them with God's Love. Amma does not

expect anything in return. Amma just keeps hugging and hugging and

hugging. Depending on person's receptivity and functionality in

the world, it make take anywhere from 1 to 100 hugs or more, but

sooner or later that Love begins to overflow in selfless service ~

charitable hospitals, schools of all levels, orphanages, 26,000

homes already built and over 100,000 planned for the homeless,

adopting earthquake and tsunami villages, huge tsunami relief,

bringing warring factions together in Sri Lanka, etc, etc. Amma

teaches by example ~ giving love, serving food to her children,

cleaning latrine, carrying heavy stones for construction in early

days, consoling earthquake and tsunami victims, etc, etc. Amma's

life is Her Message. Love is Her Religion and Silence is the

Powerful Language in which it is transmitted ~ therefore ~ it is

free of all dogmas which depend on words.

 

To be fair to my former teacher who spoke and spoke and spoke all

day. I did not attempt to listen. I figured His speech was just to

keep us attentive. I just looked at Him and felt the Love radiating

~ especially when His glance caught mine. All gratitude to Him for

introducing me to God's Love. And Amma is just turning the volume up

~ way up ~ not just for me but for the whole world.

 

> 2. In what ways does the difference benefit you in your spiritual

> development?

 

In everyway!

 

> 3. Are there any disadvantages from your poitn of

> view?

 

I see no "real" disadvantages in God's Love.

 

Om Amriteswaryai Namah,

amarnath

Link to comment
Share on other sites

-

Aikya Param

Ammachi

Monday, February 28, 2005 12:09 PM

Amma's Leadership Style

 

 

 

 

1. Is Amma's leadership style different from what you experienced

in former spiritual groups/settings? How is it different?

 

First, let me say that I am not sure I had ever considered Amma and leadership

in the same thought! Since this probably sounds weird, let me explain.

Leadership implies (to me) a give/take situation in which the leader is in it

for his/her own benefit as well as for the betterment of those being led. Amma

seems to 'lead,' if that can be applied, only in the same sense that the sun

'leads' every living organism. I allow myself to be led in political and

intellectual situations, but I turn my face to Amma much as a green thing turns

its face to the sun. On a more practical level, having come from a traditional

Christian background, Amma's 'leadership' style is entirely different from what

I had perviously experienced.

What I felt I heard during church services was that I should do 'good' so I

could go to Heaven some day (if I had been good enough to avoid being banished

to Hell!) and thereby be allowed to see God. Christianity, as I experienced it,

made God's presence on earth something phenomenal and rare. Moses was granted a

vision of God on earth, as were a few select others, but I did not have the

feeling that God was among us and available to each of us in the 'here and now.'

It seems that being a devotee of Mother's, I have come to understand that the

Divine is inseperable from our own breath and closer than our own heart beats -

and the issue of Hell is off the table. I've also found a home for my heart in

Amma's love for every being. She doesn't turn anyone away because they look,

think, or believe differently; I can't say that of my previous church homes.

Divine love doesn't strike fear or show partiality; living grace given without

strings in the silence and sanctity of an embrace says it all. And please,

please remember that these thoughts are my opinions only; my quibble has been

with the way Christ's teachings have been dispensed by organized religion, never

with Christ

 

2. In what ways does the difference benefit you in your spiritual

development?

 

First, the distance is removed and Amma's love doesn't come with conditions.

With Mother, I also see the difference between 'doing good' and love in action -

with the tsunami, for example, I didn't feel Mother helped because She should,

She helped because She is love embodied and it couldn't be any ohter way. A far

cry from televangelism, right?

 

 

Are there any disadvantages from your poitn of

view?

 

Yes; I regret the amount of time several close friends spend praying that I'll

change my ways so I won't have to burn in Hell. (-:

 

 

Thank you for the presenting the opportunity to roll these issues around.

 

Your sister in Amma,

SnehalatA

 

 

Thanks for your help.

 

In Amma's love,

Aikya

 

 

 

 

 

 

Aum Amriteswarayai Namaha!

 

 

 

Sponsor

 

 

 

 

 

--

Ammachi/

 

b..

Ammachi

 

c..

 

 

----------

 

 

 

Version: 7.0.300 / Virus Database: 266.5.2 - Release 2/28/2005

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Dear Snehalata,

 

Thank you for your thoughtful reponse. I so appreciate the way you

express your thoughts! Through my Choctaw class I cross paths

frequently with the folks for whom hellfire is a real option and the

good life happens after you die. They are Southern Baptists, bless

their Native American hearts. I know they pray for me because I'm

obviously headed for that red hot place they are sure they have

avoided.

 

Blessings!

Aikya

 

Ammachi, "Dixie Thacker" <dixielou@s...>

wrote:

>

> -

> Aikya Param

> Ammachi

> Monday, February 28, 2005 12:09 PM

> Amma's Leadership Style

>

>

>

>

> 1. Is Amma's leadership style different from what you experienced

> in former spiritual groups/settings? How is it different?

>

> First, let me say that I am not sure I had ever considered Amma

and leadership in the same thought! Since this probably sounds

weird, let me explain. Leadership implies (to me) a give/take

situation in which the leader is in it for his/her own benefit as

well as for the betterment of those being led. Amma seems

to 'lead,' if that can be applied, only in the same sense that the

sun 'leads' every living organism. I allow myself to be led in

political and intellectual situations, but I turn my face to Amma

much as a green thing turns its face to the sun. On a more

practical level, having come from a traditional Christian

background, Amma's 'leadership' style is entirely different from

what I had perviously experienced.

> What I felt I heard during church services was that I should

do 'good' so I could go to Heaven some day (if I had been good

enough to avoid being banished to Hell!) and thereby be allowed to

see God. Christianity, as I experienced it, made God's presence on

earth something phenomenal and rare. Moses was granted a vision of

God on earth, as were a few select others, but I did not have the

feeling that God was among us and available to each of us in

the 'here and now.' It seems that being a devotee of Mother's, I

have come to understand that the Divine is inseperable from our own

breath and closer than our own heart beats - and the issue of Hell

is off the table. I've also found a home for my heart in Amma's

love for every being. She doesn't turn anyone away because they

look, think, or believe differently; I can't say that of my previous

church homes. Divine love doesn't strike fear or show partiality;

living grace given without strings in the silence and sanctity of an

embrace says it all. And please, please remember that these

thoughts are my opinions only; my quibble has been with the way

Christ's teachings have been dispensed by organized religion, never

with Christ

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Thanks, Anatole. I appreciated your thoughts about Amma's

leadership style. Amma makes such a direct personal connection with

each of us that we almost overlook that she heads up a huge

international organization with hospitals and school and.....

What she does seems so natural, so familiar, so like a mother.

 

Aikya

 

Ammachi, "anatol_zinc" <anatol_zinc>

wrote:

>

> Ammachi, "Aikya Param" <aikya> wrote:

> >

> > I'm preparing a paper for the Women and Religion Section of the

> > Western Conference of the American Academy of Religion. It is

on

> > Amma's leadership style. I interviewed Brahmachari Dayamrita on

> > Saturday on the subject. I'd love to get your thoughts and

> > experiences about this. Here are my questions. Including

> > personal experiences is a great help.

> >

> > 1. Is Amma's leadership style different from what you experienced

> > in former spiritual groups/settings? How is it different?

>

> I was first attracted to Amma when I read that Amma gives hugs,

does

> not speak and that some people cry a lot. I had to see this

because

> many years before I experienced my mind drop into my heart

resulting

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...