A questioner, who has been listening to Acharya Prashant for six months, expresses that while he has gained clarity, he feels his listening is becoming superficial. He asks for guidance on how to approach the videos for a deeper understanding. Acharya Prashant explains that his advice applies to those who have been on the spiritual path for some time. He states that a point comes when it is not sufficient to just like or enjoy what the speaker says, as that is for beginners. He uses the analogy of a pharmacist handing over a drug; the listener receives it, experiences it, and benefits. This, he says, is for beginners and works for most people. However, for those who want to go deeper, they need to know what the drug is really about and come to the place the drug is coming from. It is no longer sufficient to just experience what the speaker is saying; one must come to the point the speaker is coming from. He elaborates on the challenges of the video medium, explaining that the speaker's job is to simplify the highest truths to make them accessible to everyone, especially those with short attention spans. This simplification, however, can be deceptive, making the profound appear commonplace or ordinary, which it is not. The speaker has no choice but to simplify and grip the audience's attention. He contrasts this with teachers of the past who did not have to worry about their words being widely distributed and could speak with more freedom. The same video is designed to work on two levels: as mere entertainment for a beginner, and as a source of the deepest spiritual fundamentals for a serious seeker. To go deeper, Acharya Prashant advises the listener to pause the video, make notes, and probe into the process. He suggests trying to see where a particular word is coming from and to discover the raw material from which the processed content of the video originates. Using another analogy, he says one can either just relish the pizza served, or one can enter the kitchen, go to the fields, and examine the seeds. He encourages the seeker to see the mathematical precision and the interconnectedness of the entire talk, which can be condensed into a paragraph, a sentence, a word, and finally, silence. This is how one approaches the source from which the words are coming.