 So I did one thing, and because of this suddenly everybody thought I've become some kind of an enemy. But, you know, family drama started, my mother started crying. So once a month I went to college just to check if they're keeping their part of the deal. What was aimless wandering? Now it's become formidable knowledge. Speaking of schooling and parents and careers, you know, we are in… right now we are in an age where there's so many different off-beat careers coming on, right? We have new tubers, we get this question all the time, you know. How did you talk to your parents about it? How do we convince our parents about this journey, new career that we have? Can't you convince your parents and tell them that this is what you… Or what… how did that discussion go? Did that happen where you had to sit them down and tell them that this is what I'm going to do for the rest of my life? I want to do YouTube now like this. Did that happen with YouTube? Doing YouTube right now. Well, not everybody can be convinced about everything, okay? Some things are just done. So just to give you an example, when I… when I passed my 12th standard, at that time it was called PUC. After that I decided I will educate myself. I don't want to go to college. This is a family where everybody is educated, not going to college is like sacrilege. At least today there is a little more flexibility. Those days it's like if you don't go to college, you're finished. Because now probably if you don't go to college, you may lose your lifestyle, but you won't lose your life. That was a generation, if you don't go to college, you lost your life, you… on the street, that's about it. So they were terrified of this. My father being a physician, he was just freaked about it. He is a very studious man, all his life was second, third in everything that he has done. So he couldn't believe this, that I want to educate myself. So I did one thing. And because of this suddenly everybody thought I've become some kind of an enemy. And they're not even talking to me properly. I did one thing. I was a… just to tell you, I was such a big eater, I would eat ten times, eat more, at least ten times of what I eat today. But I never was putting on weight or anything because my level of physical activity was such. I could just run up a coconut tree, I was made like that. So I was every day cycling about fifty, sixty kilometers, swimming in the Cauvery and going back like this, so eating this. I decided to go to my city university library. Every day when they opened at nine, I went eight in the evening, they closed. That entire time I sat there, read all kinds of stuff. From Homer to popular mechanics, to national geographic, to literature, to geography, this, that, whatever. Whatever came my way, every day for one year I read like this, just all kinds of things. But the most important thing for me was, though I was such a huge eater at that time, this one year I went without a meal. Morning I ate as much as I could, breakfast at home and I went there and sat there the entire day without a meal, which was a huge achievement for me because without food I could stay. This kind of expanded my way of looking at life. But, you know, family drama started, my mother started crying. When the next academic year comes, go to college, go to college, go to college. Then I said, if I must go to college, I'll go for literature. My father said, what will you do, reading poetry? You must become a doctor. He has a seat ready for me in the, you know, military, medical college, everything. I said no. Then they said, okay, at least do engineering. Then I said, see. If I say I don't want to be a doctor, if you told me become a veterinary doctor, Ayurvedic doctor, at least a witch doctor, I would look at it. If I say no doctor, you say engineer. I'm not going to listen to this. Your problem is society, your problem is not me. So I just went for literature and these three years, I went there in the beginning and they all had ready-made notes, the teachers, they would read. And everybody writing down, those days fountain pens, karakara, karakara, it makes noise. It just irritated me. I said, I don't want to listen to this karakara noise. I gave them a suggestion. If you give that notes wherever you've got it, we will photocopy it and give it back to you. We don't have to come, you don't have to come. Then, you know, if I'm there, I'll ask hundred questions. So they didn't like it. Then I made a deal with all the teachers that they'll give me attendance. That was my only concern. So once a month I just… Once a month I went to college just to check if they're keeping their part of the deal. My life is so similar. So I explored the geography of where my soul drifted in such a way, every village track, every hill that is there, every little bird nest, whatever is there, everything I paid attention, paid attention. Just wandering aimlessly. But today, like when I went for the Rally for Rivers board where all the top experts are there, some questions came up when I just telling them casually, they said, Sadhguru, how do you know all this? I said, what… what was aimless wandering? Where I paid absolute attention to everything, from a worm to an insect to anything and everything I paid attention. Now it's become formidable knowledge. I never intended to learn anything, I just paid attention because it was life. And this is all it takes.