Can we frame the problematic outside of the familiar secular/bhakt dyad? Could it be that there are more yawning fault lines in human interactions at this point of time? At the bedrock level—what divides the faithful from the curious, the reactionary from the liberated soul—is that the former is wedded to security, and the latter by an indefatigable spirit of freedom. Numerous varieties of spiritual and religious practice on the subcontinent have always been experimental, pantheistic, orally performed, non-hierarchical and philosophical in spirit. These varieties of everyday practice have made sure that the caustic, possessive individualism of modern living does not harm the foundation of a free and shared spirit. Often such open-ended spiritual practices have also squarely taken on home-grown feudal structures. By their very nature, such detached-attachment cares very little about earthly forms of social security. It inherently distrusts organic community rituals turning into tools of social engineering. Cleansing happens through a much more complicated route in and through everyday practice of body and soul. A missionary sense of moral purity is not the concern at all. This is what one notices in the devotional and aesthetic practices of Lal Ded, Ramakrishna Paramhansa or Sree Narayana Guru. The ethos of curiosity and trenchant forms of social critique is naturally bound to affective interactions. For instance, swear words and scatological exchanges create possibilities of an intimate, natural and loving tie between the preceptor and devotees, part of an expanding camaraderie in a larger critical universe. Sometimes such practices are pluralistic at the deepest level and at other times rebellious, standing up against forces of social consolidation. Contraries within us are celebrated, not banished. This is the same spirit in which William Blake pronounces that “the tygers of wrath are wiser than the horses of instruction”. The concerns are never petty political. Agnosticism and pantheism are major forms unto themselves. Images, relics, little deities, itinerant mendicants, minstrelsy—all create a universe of assurance that takes off the pressure from our buffered modern selves. The problem arises when such free spirits begin to be co-opted by forces of security and homogeneity. Unleashing of raw emotions begins to replace actual practice of passionate bonding. Liberating esoteric cults would rather take our darker preoccupations into account, meet those head on, and exorcise them. Such social catharsis humanises us paradoxically by bringing us closer to our terrible and vulnerable creaturely selves. By contrast, blurting out unworked emotions means before knowing, the sense of freedom alters gradually into concerns of security. Herds turn cagey. Each member even suspects the other in the same group. And then there is no turning back from sparring with each other. This is the beginning of fascism in public life; like surreptitious termites, it destroys trust in fellow beings.