
First Become Human: Stories of Humor and Compassion - Paperback
First Become Human: Stories of Humor and Compassion - Paperback
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by Brad Crawford (Author)
What does it really mean to become human? For Brad Crawford, the answer unfolded over decades of intimate relationship with one of the most extraordinary spiritual teachers of the twentieth century - Avatar Adi Da Samraj.
First Become Human is a collection of leelas: personal stories drawn from Brad's years as a devoted student and resident at Adi Da's island sanctuary on Naitauba, Fiji. Told with humor, candor, and deep affection, these thirty-four vignettes reveal a teacher who worked through laughter and provocation, through parrots and pool games, through dreams, healings, and the quiet instruction of everyday life. Each story is brief, vivid, and immediate - Brad began telling them the day they happened, and they carry that freshness decades later.
This is not a doctrinal text or a theological argument. It is something rarer: a firsthand account of what it feels like to be transformed by love, told by a man honest enough to admit how much he needed it. Brad writes about his anger and his fear, his resistance and his breakthroughs, his grief at the master's passing in 2008, and the blessing he continues to feel to this day. The stories range from the comic - a fake heart attack arranged, Brad suspects, by divine intervention - to the quietly devastating, as when a dying friend says simply, "I'm with Bhagavan. No big deal."
At the heart of the book is the ancient relationship between guru and devotee, explored here not as abstract philosophy but as lived experience. Adi Da Samraj demanded everything of his students, and gave everything in return. For Brad, that relationship became the central fact of his life - the force that broke him open, again and again, until something more real could emerge.
First Become Human will resonate deeply with anyone drawn to spiritual memoir, the guru-devotee tradition, or the question of what genuine practice looks like from the inside. It is an introduction to Adi Da Samraj for those who have never encountered him, and a homecoming for those who have.



















