businessmen, whose large donations were a major source of support of the Ashrams, faired little better. They seldom received a personal audience or favorable seating at Darshan, the evening public time of question and answers with the guru. In contrast with the relatively easy public availability, mischievous play, provocative humor and worldly sophistication of Baba, the ambience of Gurumayi is more private, simple, serious and subtle. It is as powerful, but in another way. In response to Gurumayi’s ascension to Siddha Yoga’s singular guru, | imagined hearing Baba saying that God energy was at least androgynous, if the dimension of sexual identity was relevant at all. Baba taught that divine energy, by necessity, is expressed through a wide variety of particular personalities and cultures and should not be confused with the details of its manifestations. This included the sexual identity of the chosen Vehicle. Guramayi’s central theme, as | understand it, concerns the simple, quiet and pervasive powers of love and faith. Some say Baba took the path, marga, of selfless action, karma-marga, whereas Gurumayi took the bhakti-marga, the road of loving devotion and faith. The third marga is jnana-marga, my inclination, is the road of intellectual study and knowledge. Aldous Huxley related the choice among these three categories of yoga practice, to the physical and personality types of William Sheldon’s 1954 Atlas of Man. Karma yoga corresponded to the mesomorphic body type and the assertive boldness, high energy, and interpersonal callousness of the somatotonic personality. Bhakti Yoga was the characteristic choice of endomorphic body types with the vwiscerotonic personality traits of sociability, good will, tolerance and love. Huxley associated Jnana Yoga with ectomorphic body type and the cerebrotonic characteristic of shyness, sensitivity and intellectuality. My summers with Baba at his temporary Ashram in Venice, California and the permanent American Ashram in Sou