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A Hindu Tradition?

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sandyRoe | 08:37 Wed 22nd Jan 2014 | Religion & Spirituality
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An older man gives all his possessions to his family and, wearing only a dhoti and carrying an alms bowl, wanders out of their lives. He spends the rest of his days on the road pondering the meaning of life.
I remember hearing this mention in an episode of Minder on TV. If it really happens, what's it called?
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possibly this, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sadhu
08:40 Wed 22nd Jan 2014
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That seems to be it. Thank you, Emmie.
from the link, i think it's on the right lines. Gandhi would have been a good advocate, had he not been a leader of men, if you get my meaning.

The Sanskrit terms sādhu ("good man") and sādhvī ("good woman") refer to renouncers who have chosen to live a life apart from or on the edges of society to focus on their own spiritual practice.[1]

The words come from the Sanskrit root sādh, which means "reach one's goal", "make straight", or "gain power over".[2] The same root is used in the word sādhana, which means "spiritual practice". 'Sadhu' can also be used as Vidhyartha, meaning 'let good happen'.
there are any number, actually probably a lot of very similar names for those that follow this path, if you read the book Kim by Kipling,
Kim's friend is a holy man, who talks of the wheel of life, coming full circle until one reaches a state of nirvana, peace.
In the Western World it would be called a midlife crisis.

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