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<ref>Sri Aurobindo. (1999). The master of the work. In The synthesis of yoga I.
http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/23/the-master-of-the-work#p24</ref>
 
A larger psychic and emotional relation with God and the world, more deep and plastic in its essence, more wide and embracing in its movements, more capable of taking up in its sweep the whole of life, is imperative.
<ref>Sri Aurobindo. (1999). The ascent of the sacrifice II. In The synthesis of yoga I.
http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/23/the-ascent-of-the-sacrifice-i#p18</ref>
 
Wideness and calmness are the foundation of the Yogic consciousness and the best condition for inner growth and experience. If a wide calm can be established in the physical consciousness, occupying and filling the very body and all its cells, that can become the basis for its transformation; in fact, without this wideness and calmness the transformation is hardly possible.
<ref>Sri Aurobindo. (2013). Peace - the basis of the sadhana. In Letters on yoga II.