According to Osho, private interviews are unnecessary and even harmful: everyone carries the same human ailments—anger, sex, greed, restlessness—so addressing them together is more truthful and efficient. Requests for privacy arise from fear and ego, protecting images and spiritual “business.” Public sharing itself is therapy: confessing openly dissolves half the burden, shatters the illusion of specialness, and births compassion and solidarity, making collective dialogue the right context.
We don’t need private talks because our problems are the same; speaking openly in a group drops ego and secrecy, saves time, and starts the healing.