I went to Hollywood and began to be invited to meet many people. The Sri
Meher Baba group came into my life again. I was invited to Malcolm and Jean Schloss' home.
On their wall was an interesting picture of a being with a high hat that reached up to a
long peak. The face was smiling as if in ecstasy. I said simply, "I know a dance like
that." Malcolm and Jean looked at me strangely: "What do you mean you know a
dance? This picture is a copy of one in a museum in Paris. It is a figure from an ancient
civilization, from the Angkor Wat shrine in Cambodia. What exactly do you mean?"
I explained to them that while I was in Santa Barbara, I used to go out
into the woods to meditate and read. One day as I entered the woods, a small figure under
five feet tall appeared from the other world. She told me to learn a dance. She stood and
danced in front of me like a teacher and I danced following her every move. We worked for
a long time, but I was so lost in concentration that I didn't notice it passing by. Then
she taught me a chant and told me to dance to my own chanting. She also told me what
instruments I could use as percussion. Before I could thank this beautiful being, she
disappeared. Her face was sweet and angelic, like the picture on the wall.
Malcolm and Jean looked at each other incredulously. They were excited
and asked me to dance for them, which I did. They asked me what other dances I had.
"I have a whole concert with costumes," I said. I explained how the headdress
for the Angkor Wat dance came in an interesting way. I was wondering how I could get a
headdress of this sort. I was broke and couldn't send away to Cambodia even if there were
such a headdress there. It became a problem. One afternoon, not having slept during the
night, I lay down to rest. I went into a deep state and heard a voice telling me how to
make a headdress. It said to use a lid from a pot, a funnel and a stick carved smoothly
round that ended in a point. I was to turn the funnel upside down so the point was upward
and then have it welded onto the pot-top. The carved stick was to be glued into the funnel
end. They then said to get some rice and glue a design to the funnel and to the top of the
lid. All this was to be painted gold, with a cap of gold material sewn to the gold top.
"This," said the voice, "would make a headdress worthy of the dance."
The instructions were over and I complied with them. The headdress came out rather nice.
"The other dances you asked about," I explained, "were
also received mostly by inspiration." A Mayan priestess dance came with its chant
through a vision in a dream. In the vision I saw a pyramid, but it was different, not like
the Egyptian pyramids; it had a square chamber on top with a door and stairs leading down
to the ground. I saw a priestess come out doing movements and chanting. Like the Angkor
Wat chant, I memorized it. Later I was taken to a meeting at the women's club in Santa
Barbara, not knowing what the subject of the meeting was to be. Upon arrival, I found that
it was to be on Mayan culture. The lecturer was an expert on the subject. I went backstage
to talk to the lecturer and asked if she could verify that the chant I knew was Mayan. She
listened carefully and then said that it was undoubtedly ancient Mayan.
I had sung some other chants for Swami Yogananda. They had strange
syllables and had come to me in meditation. He had confirmed that they were Sanskrit.
I had been accompanying myself by chanting when I danced. It had a
captivating effect on the audience, being so different. These dances were also exciting to
perform.
Malcolm said, "Please tell us more about these dances you perform.
I have an idea formulating. What made you do this type of dancing when you were trained
for ballet?" I answered, "I had been dancing merely for entertainment prior to
attending a church in the country. I saw only a half dozen people attending, so I took a
vow to myself that if people won't go to church, I would take church to them through
dancing. When this decision was made, I began to get inner help and guidance on how to
accomplish it through new dance compositions. I began to rearrange my concert program, and
many new and interesting dance patterns began to come into my mind. I was even shown by
Master Hilarion how to practice correctly. I would go into the studio and start the
exercises, but if I rested too soon through laziness, the Master would reprimand me and
make me continue. After the required time for practice, he would say, `Now rest for
fifteen minutes, with complete relaxation.' He would then have me start again. In this
way, with ease and no tension, I was able to practice many hours a day.
"One day I went into the studio and decided to create a humorous
dance. As I stood there I heard, `Compose the dance of Saint Francis.' I argued, `No, I
want to do a comedy dance.' Almost against my will I found myself doing a dance in modern
ballet movements on some of the aspects of the life of Saint Francis. I had not read his
life and knew little of the saint, yet I easily eased into his mood. I stood in the studio
and became Saint Francis in my mind, and in my imagination a white dove flew and perched
upon my shoulder, then flew away to freedom the freedom Saint Francis did not have.
With these modern dance movements, I acted out his life and ended with striking my head
three times on the floor. Soon after this, reading the life of Saint Francis, I found that
in his travail he had struck his head upon the earth thrice; then Christ appeared and he
became reconciled to his life. It was only when the dance was complete I was told within
to go to a music store and buy a certain record. I found the music and it fit together
with the dance perfectly.
"A dance of Mary came in a similar way, the movements of the dance
re-enacting her life story. Jan designed a stained glass window by painting colored
designs on muslin cloth and putting a light in back to give the translucent effect of
glass.
"The `Dance of Life' came into the mind first and then was
translated into movement. This dance showed humanity's struggle to come out of the
darkness of self into the peace and freedom of being unshackled through aspiration towards
the light.
"Malcolm, I think one of the most interesting dances which came
through me was of the primordial fire coming forth and creating and forming matter into
earth. I was shown each step and movement and then when I was through I asked, `What shall
I call this dance?' The name `Fohat' came.
"These dances are my way of taking higher ideas, or what I called
`church,' to people. Dance and art are forms of lifting humankind, but over the ages they
have deteriorated to mere entertainment. I feel art could be inspiration and still not be
creepy or dull."
Jean and Malcolm stood quietly looking at each other and then Jean
said, "I have an exciting thought. I would like to get some friends together to have
you give a concert. We will invite Swami Yogananda, too. We know just the theater for the
concert."
The little theater was artistic, and a group of us worked together in
harmony to make the concert a success. I was too spaced out in those days to think it was
a great honor that Swami Yogananda would attend. The night of the performance was
exciting. The curtain opened and there sat Swami in the front row. After the performance
he came backstage with his entourage and said he enjoyed it. His smile was so warm and
loving that I felt he really meant it. He said, "Get someone to sponsor you and you
will go far."
Because of the success of this concert, the group helping me became
ambitious. They came up with the brilliant idea to give another performance and invite
important directors and people of influence so that "my message" would go forth
to a waiting world. Prince Midvani's glorious garden was arranged for the great
appearance. Spotlights played upon the green trees and flowers, making the garden into a
veritable fairyland. In the back of the garden, which rose to a hilltop, a stream flowed
down, with colored lights enhancing the view. The stream ended in a deep, six-foot lily
pool. The garden had been arranged beautifully with comfortable chairs and soft elegant
sofas. Beautiful people in evening clothes were sitting on the patio being served drinks
in frosted glasses. It was Hollywood in its most elegant stageset. The elite were arranged
so they could sit in comfort and watch the performance. Even the heaven worlds could not
compete with the "colossal splendor" of this scene.
The only one who didn't fit into this great scheme was me. Chanting
was, I thought, part of my forte for this performance. But destiny thought otherwise.
Three days before the event, I got laryngitis. I couldn't even croak. All my new spiritual
friends were praying like mad for my healing. Yet the more they prayed, the worse my
throat became. I mentally adjusted and said, "I have a `New World Dance' that has a
great message for the world. It will look wonderful in this garden setting."
I danced "Elephant Boy" and tried the "Angkor Wat"
without chanting. They were both flops. Then came the moment for the "New World
Dance," heralding the coming of the New Age. I was confident that it would be
appreciated accompanied by the César Franck Symphony in D Minor. The lights came on for
the dance. I didn't need my voice for this, only my soul's love for a new world which
would come forth on this Earth. I could tell by the silence that I had the audience with
me. They were a stuffy audience, all sitting in separate groups without any unity. I felt
the dance would do something for them, and it truly did. I came to the triumphant end,
where in white robes I go up the stage step by step, carefully backing up and feeling my
foot on the platform. There was no platform there I had forgotten. I backed up
carefully with my arms raised in exaltation and suddenly fell into space. I found myself
at the bottom of the six-foot lily pool submerged in scummy, cold water. I had disappeared
from sight so suddenly that some of the audience thought I had resurrected, white robe and
all. There was a long, silent pause while everyone's mind adjusted to the scene. Then a
roar of laughter broke forth which lasted for fifteen minutes. All those stuffy people
became one as they rolled with laughter. Some of the directors came and fished me out,
pulling me by my arms. I arose like an apparition, except that I looked like the most
bedraggled thing with wet, straight hair all over my face and the white robe of the
world's hope all soaked and clinging to my body in a most inelegant way. To put it mildly,
I looked like a mess. As I was fished out, the laughter grew louder and louder and turned
into a ruckus.
It was a fun Hollywood party for the others, but not for me. My ego was
not hurt, but I was damn mad at God. I felt the same feeling I had felt when my purse was
stolen. I grouched all the way to the dressing room. All the way home I said, "God,
why didn't You remind me that there was no platform with stairs there? You know
everything! Couldn't You have saved me? If You can give me the dances, You could also tell
me that. Why did You open my hearing to You if You don't talk to me and warn me when I
need it?" There was no answer absolute silence within. It was destiny's way of
putting me on the path I was to tread. Hollywood was not to be in the scheme of things.
I began to have the feeling that I would like to return to Oakland. It
became clear and strong within me. I had no money to get there and was thinking on that
when I received a letter from a friend who was in the moving business. He said that a
spiritual lecturer wanted some furniture moved from Los Angeles to Oakland. The lecturer
had called my friend and said, "I was looking in the Yellow Pages and somehow your
name stood out. I felt inside that I should call you to see if you'd like to take the
job." My friend took the job and said that he also had to take a couch back to
Oakland and that I could sit on it with ease if I wished to make a trip home to see my
mother. The timing was perfect. I rode home in the back of a moving truck on an elegant
sofa, meditating and reading, knowing this was my sign that the Masters of Wisdom were
wiser than I, even if they did have me fall in the lily pool in order to once more turn me
towards the direction in which I should proceed.
It was nice to see Mother and be back in Northern California. A friend
had found me a building which had once been a small bank. It was on Domingo Avenue in
Berkeley, across from the Clairmont Hotel. The setting, with the hotel grounds just across
the way, was beautiful. This studio cum ashram consisted of a huge room downstairs, a
large cement hole where a vault had once been, and a toilet which was converted into a
kitchen by installing a small electric toaster. On the mezzanine where the bankers once
held court was a sitting room used at night for sleeping, and a toilet. There was no bath
or shower. I either sneaked into the hotel across the way or went to the YMCA and had a
shower.
The studio became very elegant. Fifty yards of white fabric were hung
on the end like a stage drop. Candelabras were on each side and flowers always arrived
from someone. It had a dramatic effect with its incense, curtains and candles. Sometimes a
person off the street would open the door and poke their head in and say, "What is
this? What is this feeling here?" It had atmosphere. The best part of the bank was
the huge curved windows that went from four feet above the floor up to the twenty-foot
ceiling.
I had no furniture in the studio, so every time Louis dropped in he
would say, "You should have furniture and a small stove on which to cook." I
made it very clear to him that if there were to be either, they must come without anyone
spending money, absolutely free. Louis was adamant, and one day he spoke sharply to me:
"What is this? You want to be the only one that has the privilege of giving? You
don't want anyone else to have that joy? What about the rest of us? Are we to be always on
the receiving line, never giving?" That rebuke gave a new perspective to the
spiritual life. It made separation cease, and giving and taking part of life itself.
Nevertheless, I was still unyielding regarding the furniture and stove. I felt God who
created me could take care of me.
Louis had a part-time job at a furniture store. The next day the
manager asked him if he would be willing to take some new modern chrome furniture until
the manager had some time to store it. Louis came that evening to bring the furniture,
with a grin on his face: "You win."
A few days later he went on a job in his moving van and, far out in the
country away from all houses in an open field, he spotted a small two-burner gas stove in
perfect condition. His grin was even broader when he came that evening with his prize
stove in his hands. He said, "Life is fun when God is on your side. No
correction, Hilda. Life is fun when you are on God's side."
When I was deep in meditation a few days later, The Mother came to test
me and see if I could maintain the same frame of mind in austerity as in the abundance
that had been flowing my way. I felt a freedom from the Earth pull come within my body,
saw a burst of light within my brow, and then heard The Mother's voice, "If you were
in the gutter with no place to sleep, would you still love Me?" There was no
hesitation. "Yes, Mother." Then Her voice was heard again. "If you had no
flowers on your altar, no one cared to bring any, everyone was deserting you, would you
cease to love Me?" "No, Mother." That was all. I sat for an hour bathed in
Her love when a knock came on the door, and there stood Louis with bunches of flowers in
his arms.
He recounted his story. He had been driving in his van when suddenly he
had an inspiration to go to a flower shop and buy myriads of gladioluses. After filling
his van, he asked the owner of the flower shop for one white gardenia. The owner answered,
"I don't have any today. The shipment of flowers hasn't arrived yet." Louis was
persistent and the man in a disturbed tone said, "If you don't believe me, look in
the refrigerator for yourself." Louis opened the door and there in the empty
refrigerator was one white gardenia, still covered with dew. The man stared with a face
showing incredulity. He said, "That is impossible. It can't be. It wasn't there a few
minutes ago." He looked at Louis quizzically, then said, "You may have it
free."
Louis brought armload after armload of gladioluses into the studio.
They were of innumerable colors. The studio smelt and looked like a flower shop. The
Mother put Her idea over in a big way. If you surrender, Mother will take over. Give up
willingly and you don't have to have it taken away. You can beat God to the draw.
I began to think about how I would pay the rent, for I was still on the
self-righteous path of obedience and poverty. This problem was solved when a friend with a
child came to see me and asked, "Hilda, I want my child to take dancing lessons from
you. I can arrange at my child's school for them to let you use the gym free, and the
children will come directly to the class from their rooms. I will collect the money for
you. You will not have to worry about that." I agreed, and this arrangement enabled
me to work only one day a week and make enough for rent and food. The rest of the time
could be used for meditating, creating dances, and holding spiritual classes.
The Masters seemed content that I had at last found a place of my own
where I could work with them in peace. They usually worked with me after midnight, when
the world with its vibrations of activity began to quiet down and the air would become
still. "We are pleased with the arrangements you have for living. We have had a
council meeting and have decided to start dictation on the booklet
<MI%-22>T<%0>he Golden Quest. Be prepared with pen and paper. We will start
tomorrow night. We will not work tonight, for you have had a full day. Tonight while your
body rests in sleep, we will train you and give you counsel on the work which is to
begin."
The next night I sat with a pencil and paper, waiting. It was the early
hours of the morning before I felt the vibration of the room begin to change. The light
came and I felt Master Hilarion there. "A booklet will be dictated through you, not a
book to be kept on dusty shelves, but a little book of light kept in the heart. Keep the
lessons in the book simple and direct, eliminating all unnecessary words and thoughts. The
thoughts must be like darts of light penetrating to the very heart of the mind. Do not
bring your own personality into it. Simply state the truth, for there is a vibration in
every word that will go to the hearts of the readers to lodge there and blossom into a
flower of truth. Change as little as possible. You have done well and the ground is now
broken, so it will be easy for you from now on. At all times, use your instrument, the
body, with care. We need pure channels, for the harvest is great and the workers are
few."
We started. His instructions were, "Let all else drop away until
this task is done. Work ceaselessly. Let no negative thought mar a perfect completion of
your work. Do not let anything disturb your vision. The format is as follows: one chapter
will deal with self-mastery, the next will be meditation, and the third will be the power
of thoughts, words and actions. Let us start now.
Foreword:
The destiny of humankind is in the balance. The deciding factor rests
upon those souls who are willing to sacrifice their own desires for the good of humanity.
This book is dedicated to all those brave, selfless people striving to pull the world out
of chaos..."
For the next three weeks I was immersed in the writing of the lessons
for Master Hilarion. For a week or more after the booklet was completed, I rested my mind
and body by walking in the woods and going to the beach to let nature harmonize me.
The Master appeared once more after the booklet was completed and said,
"Rest, Daughter. I will leave you for a while. Another service will be entrusted to
you by a new teacher. The service will be in your own line, which is art, dance and music.
Blessings on you."