Acharya Prashant addresses the numerous questions he has received regarding the COVID-19 pandemic. He begins by stating that the first thing to do is to stop asking him, a spiritual teacher, about a medical issue. The primary mistake, he explains, is consulting him instead of experts. Since Corona is a virus that affects the body, information about it, its effects, prevention, and treatment should be sought from doctors, science, and research. This is his foremost advice: to quietly accept, emulate, and follow what doctors, researchers, and science are saying, and to stop paying attention to miscellaneous talks. He laments the strange situation where people reject the very science on which hospitals stand, yet ultimately have to go to them when they fall ill. He urges people to learn to respect knowledge and specialization, acknowledging that general knowledge cannot replace an expert's deep understanding. While he is willing to discuss the psychological analysis of the fear arising from the disease, he considers that a secondary matter. The primary issue is the virus itself, and one must follow the guidance of medical professionals. Acharya Prashant discusses the causes of the second wave, noting that while some factors like viral mutations are beyond human control and not part of any conspiracy, other causes are self-created. He lists several foolish attitudes that have contributed to the spread: believing oneself to be immune like a 'Superman,' considering precautions to be for the weak, thinking religious devotion grants immunity, or dismissing the virus as a conspiracy by pharmaceutical companies. He points out that this foolishness has been displayed by the general public, governments, and even religious organizations. He connects this behavior to a deeper, long-standing cultural issue of denying truth. He states that our entire lives are often based on the denial of truth, so it is not surprising that we continue this habit even during a pandemic, preferring gossip over facts. A crisis, he explains, does not suddenly make us weak; it mercilessly exposes our pre-existing weaknesses and the fault lines that were already present in society. The pandemic has simply brought our collective foolishness to the forefront. In conclusion, Acharya Prashant offers a positive perspective. He suggests that the only good thing to come out of this crisis is the opportunity it provides for introspection and to see ourselves honestly. He expresses hope that this severe blow can compel us to improve, even though we shouldn't need such a catastrophe to learn. He emphasizes that the suffering caused by the virus is only 10% due to the virus itself; the other 90% is due to our own foolishness.