A kindergarten student will naturally find it impossible to get an M.A. degree immediately. But he is a student. It may take him twenty, twenty-two, twenty-four years, but one day he will also become an M.A. Here we are all seekers. Even those who are wallowing in the pleasures of ignorance, if they have a sincere belief in God, are seekers in their own way. Not only those who are praying to God and meditating on God but also those who have faith in God — that God can do something for them, although He may not be doing it right now — are unconscious seekers. The very fact that they have belief in God is a sign of their God-acceptance. In the course of time, those aspirants will become like us. They will feel that mere belief won’t do, that they have to consciously try to manifest their belief, which is right now vision, in order to transform it into reality. When they have that kind of inner feeling, they become conscious seekers.
When we become conscious seekers, devoted seekers, unconditional seekers, we accelerate our spiritual progress. Then God-realisation does not remain a far cry. But we have to start. Something seems difficult when we have not consciously started. Once we consciously start something, that thing does not remain difficult. If we start unconsciously today, tomorrow we do not know that we actually started, and after a while we may totally forget about that thing. But if we pray to God soulfully and consciously, and tomorrow if we again do it consciously and soulfully, if we continue in this way, then nothing remains difficult.From:Sri Chinmoy,AUM — Vol.II-3, No. 2, 27 February 1976, Vishma Press, 1976
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