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Sri Aurobindo

Letters of Sri Aurobindo

Volume 2. 1936

Letter ID: 1703

Sri Aurobindo — Nirodbaran Talukdar

August 17, 1936

J wants to know why or how the mind-fag has come in and by what attitude or process it can quickly pass off...

There is nothing serious in it. Very often when the mind has been doing something for a long time (I mean of course the physical mind), something which demands intensity of work or action, not what can be done as a routine, it finds itself unable to do it well any longer. That means that it is strained, needs rest so that the force may gather again. Rest or a variation. A little rest given to it or a variation of work should set it right again.

I thought that one or two hours’ work without undue effort might perhaps keep the channel open and at the same time produce no fatigue.

It is not a question of ordinary fatigue by overwork – but of a temporary inability to go on doing the same thing over and over any longer. That is what I mean by mind-fag. It is not the mere writing of poetry of any kind but the intensity necessary to bring down that kind of poetry that is in question. The channel in fact is not working because of the fag – it can work again only after rest, by not forcing oneself.

Dr. Manilal recommends arnica for Mulshankar’s pain, and massage.

Massage best. No homeopathy without R’s intervention is allowable.

S complains again of vague pains. Dr. Manilal says he must do only light work.

We gave him no work. It is his own spree.

A poem begun on the 6th and completed by Darshan... Well, any remark?

Sorry. Your poem got mixed up with Nolini’s papers and I saw it only now. Glanced through but will have to study more carefully. Will return with N’s.

Tomorrow, by the way, I am going to burst a little – Attention!

Eh what! Burst? Which way? If you explode, fizz only – don’t blow up the Asram.