Acharya Prashant addresses a questioner who identifies as a Brahmin by caste and performs priestly duties, suggesting he might be doing something wrong. Acharya Prashant advises him to become a true Pandit and a true Brahmin as defined by Shri Krishna in the Bhagavad Gita. Referring to the second chapter, eleventh verse, he explains that a true Pandit is one who does not grieve for the living or the dead and remains unattached to those with life force. He emphasizes that a true Brahmin is one established in the Supreme Truth, rather than one born into a specific caste, noting that birth only produces flesh and waste, not spiritual status. He clarifies that social labels and caste stamps are meaningless. Furthermore, citing the forty-sixth verse, he explains that just as a small reservoir becomes redundant when a vast lake is available, all Vedas become of little use to a Brahmin who has realized the Supreme Truth. A true Brahmin is one who transcends even the Vedas and maintains a direct relationship with the infinite Supreme Truth.