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Biographies and Awakening Accounts>
Robert Adams - "The Good for Nothing Man"
Robert Adams (1928-1997)
Eulogy
Reflections on a Non-Guru
It Is All A Cosmic Joke (audio satsang)
A FUN TALK ABOUT SATSANG
  
One of the first stops after leaving Colorado that my best friend and I took
in our new home-on-wheels ("Lakshmi") was in Sedona, AZ to go to satsang
with Robert Adams. Many of you may know that Robert Adams (whose body died a
few years ago) sat before Ramana for years in Tiruvannamalai.
  
We knew that Robert Adams was aging and that a special opportunity awaited
us. Now, keep in mind that my conscious spiritual journey was rather new and
I had previously immersed myself in the Satsang Mecca called Boulder.
  
I had really gotten a feeling for what satsang was "supposed to" look like
and went to Robert Adams¹ place fully armed with my finest "spiritual"
clothing, "spiritual" face, "spiritual" voice, and "spiritual" sitting posture.
  
When we arrived, spiritually carrying our zaphus behind our hips in silence,
heads held humbly down, we were quite surprised to find a room full of
relaxed people hanging around, just acting normal. In fact, they were so
talkative with each other and easy-going and animated that it made me wonder
if we were really at the right house.
  
I came prepared for silence and holiness and the scene was unsettling being
so ordinary. There was nothing spiritual about the place, like decorations
or altars or anything that I recall. There may have been a small photo of
Ramana. So I sat down and prepared to "meditate."
  
Needless to say, I simply couldn¹t keep my eyes closed. There was too much
fun going on in the room. I struggled with it for a while, but that became
so darned uncomfortable. Eventually, I just sat there figuring it would get
holy, maybe, after Robert came in.
  
You can imagine my surprise when he did come in. While I was expecting a
spiritual-looking man dressed in Indian garb, what he was actually wearing
was a pair of baggy, silky jogging pants and a tee-shirt and he had on a hot
pink rumpled-up baseball cap that was on crooked!
  
Because Robert had Parkinson¹s Disease, he kind of made his way across the
living room in a slow-motion shuffle and sat himself in the chair reserved
for him. Everyone made room for him as he passed by and with great affection
touched their palms together in reverence.
  
Robert sat on the chair for some time. It was real quiet in the room, but
not an "it¹s-time-to-be-quiet" kind of quiet. It was just naturally quiet.
And no one said anything. So, trained as I was to recognize a jnani, wellS.
no way. This guy was plainly sitting there with his mouth open and his eyes
half closed. He was hunched over with his skin just hanging on his face.
There was nothing that I could "read." And boy, did I try. I looked for some
kind of radiant glow, some kind of visible wisdom, some hint of Ramana, and
nothing! I looked into his eyes and it was as if no one was home. My mind
was just struck dumb.
  
Eventually, Robert jerked his arm up, sort of pointing a finger. That was
the cue for the person holding the boombox to hit "play." I thought, "Oh.
THIS must be the holy part." I closed my eyes in full expectation of sacred
words or ethereal music or at least some Sanskrit bhajans. To my utter
shock, the thin and twangy voice of Willie Nelson¹s "Always on my mind" came
singing out!
  
The whole room went into an uproar. Everyone was laughing and swaying from
side to side in enjoyment, singing dramatic crescendos at each chorus:
"Telll meeeee. Tell me that your sweet love hasn¹t died, etc."
  
Robert? He just sat there, expressionless, his body unmoving, hunched in his
chair. No sparkling eyes, no nothing. By then, my mouth was dangling open as
well. My mind had completely come to a halt. It could not make sense of this
at all. It didn¹t know and could not begin to interpret what it was seeing.
  
The next musical selection was Kenny Rogers singing really sentimental love
songs. These were no Sanskrit Bhajans about Enlightenment or God or
anything. These were love songs riddled with illusion and duality. Rather
than condemning them or spiritually correcting them, Robert Adams was just
sitting there. Everyone was laughing so hard that tears were coming out. It
was so infectious that before I knew it, I was singing along and laughing
too. My sides were aching when we were through.
  
Afterwards, with everyone returning to normal breathing and with some sighs
and residual giggles here and there, I had the thought, "Well, maybe now it
will get serious." There was a moment of silence. Then suddenly, someone
said, "Hey! How about Mexican?"² This was met by an outburst of cheering!
Soon everyone got up and grouped together in cars to go to a local Mexican
restaurant.
  
Bewildered but happy to go along I arrived at a scene that I was dismayed to
find rather loud and crowded and chaotic. Shortly after we were seated, I
looked over at Robert. He had a bright green margarita in front of him.
  
Before leaving, I didn¹t want to miss the opportunity to speak with Robert
even though at the time I sure didn¹t know what to make of him, but all that
came out was something like, "I like your hat." And he said something like,
"Thanks."
  
The sweet, natural happiness that I experienced in his presence was so very
thick and blatant. All the ideas I had picked up about what it is to be in
the presence of Truth were permanently cracked. The mind just couldn¹t get
around the chasm between what it thought holiness was supposed to be like
and what it had actually met that day with Robert Adams. In its attempt to
cross that chasm, it had fallen into it, giving rise to an absolutely
undeniable experience of joyfulness and peace.
  
[Editor's note: Kheyala is a long term member of the HarshaSatsangh. Her
account of the Satsang with Robert Adams first appeared in Spring 2002 of
the original HS-Ezine.]
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