Acharya Prashant addresses a questioner who feels split into multiple observers within their own mind—one who acts and another who watches the action. He dismisses this internal division as a mere mental game and a sign of 'passing time' rather than a state of spiritual realization. He explains that if one claims to see an actor and an observer, there must logically be a third entity observing both, leading to an infinite and fragmented sequence of mirrors. This fragmentation occurs only because the mind is not fully immersed in a meaningful or right task. When the mind truly 'drowns' or dissolves in something significant, all internal divisions vanish, just as a person drowning in water cannot have one hand remaining outside. He uses the metaphor of a powerful magnet to describe Truth or the Soul. Just as scattered iron filings are drawn together and unified by a magnet, the fragmented parts of the mind become one only when they find a higher purpose or the Truth. Acharya Prashant emphasizes that being divided into 'the seen' and 'the seer' is a state of suffering. He quotes Kabir Saheb to illustrate that while physical or material tears can be mended—earth by rain, cloth by thread, and the body by medicine—a 'torn' or fragmented mind is incredibly difficult to heal. He concludes that true spiritual health is not about constant self-observation or 'witnessing' as a practice, but about finding something so beautiful and captivating that one completely forgets themselves and their internal divisions.