A young man in his mid-thirties stood in the middle of a busy street in Kolkata’s down-market Beniapukur suburb, unmindful of the danger he was posing to himself and the way he was throwing the traffic into chaos. His hands trembled as he muttered to himself and looked aggressively around him. His scraggy hair and beard and ragged clothes indicated he was not fully in his senses.
He eventually ended up with Iswar Sankalpa and was diagnosed with schizophrenia, consuming an enormous amount of alcohol and not taking his medicines regularly. His family, once located, said. . .