 I know you don't like to get drawn into politics, Sadhguru, but something which has hit very close home is recently there was a man who was injured in an explosion that took place in Bengaluru. Now it turns out that this man, Sharik, on his WhatsApp status had a statue of Adiyu. How do you read the fact that he was the man who was inspired by ISIS literature? He apparently self-radicalized. He had a handler. He was caught in an explosion and he had a picture of Adiyugi. I think I should be glad that even he is carrying Adiyugi. That's how I would like to see it, but that's not the reality I know. One thing is he is trying to mask his identity. That is a clever thing to do for the work that he is doing. But the important thing is that we need to understand any image of this kind. You know what happened in Afghanistan to the Buddha statues. This has happened across northern plains that anything that was considered idolatry was destroyed because somebody firmly believed that. So now I think most people have settled, okay, you do your thing, I do my thing, it's okay, I think we should bring that. So there are still some radical elements going on like this. For them, the most terrible thing is that there is Adiyugi statue standing there, which hurts them in some way because they think we are worshipping. We are not worshipping, we are using it as an inspiration to go in a certain direction. But still that is the belief. So this education needs to happen to all communities that how you want to reach something beyond yourself. See, essentially let's see it this way. Whatever your religion is, I'm somebody who's never had any scripture of any culture. I've stayed away from that. Whatever it may be, essentially I believe all religions were created to help a human being in some way to transcend their limitations and find higher qualities within themselves. Somebody will do it by prayer, somebody will do it by ritual, somebody will do it by all kinds of worship, somebody will do it by meditation, somebody will do it by knowledge, it doesn't matter how. Essentially in yoga we say there are only four ways. You can use your body and do it, we call this karma yoga. You can do your intelligence and do it, we call this gnanayoga. You can use your emotion and do it, we call this bhakti yoga. You can use your life energies and do it, this is called as kriya yoga. So whatever religion you may come from, in some way it is a combination of these four things. In what proportion it may vary, but that's all a human being can do. You can use your body, mind, emotion and energy, there's nothing else for you to use. You can invent whatever you want. So this maturity needs to come. I think it's beginning to happen in the world, across the world. We're reaching billions of people every year. In spite of that, what I see is there is small fringes, margin, margins of people who still firmly believe whatever is been told to them. So I think this needs to change. It is not anybody's business, how an individual person is pursuing his own well-being. So about Adiyogi becoming so popular that even a terrorist suspect carries Adiyogi, I think it makes me very happy. That is always there, that is not new for us. I don't know, I have not counted an on average in a year how many death threats come to me, they keep coming. But still I'm alive, so it's okay. Is it a cause of worry that in the place that you live and in other pockets, in Karnataka, for example, this gentleman was in Mangalore, he travelled to Tamil Nadu, he travelled to Coimbatore, he travelled to Kerala, that there is growing radicalization in a sect or in a group of… No, you must understand, he's doing the same route that I did. I was in Mysore, constantly travelled to Mangalore, then Mysore to Coimbatore, this guy is travelling the same route. I know I'm joking about a serious subject, but it's very important that we learn to handle the most significant aspects of our lives, we learn to carry it lightly, otherwise we will want to kill each other. Let's not go there.