Acharya Prashant responds to a question about the primacy of the body, mind, or soul by stating that the questioner himself is primary. He points out that the questioner has already created a division between these three entities, which implies that the one doing the dividing is greater than them. This "you" who divides and questions is the ego. The speaker challenges the foundation of the question, asking how the questioner knows for certain that the body, mind, and soul are three separate things, suggesting this knowledge is a borrowed belief, not personal experience. The speaker criticizes the tendency to ask questions based on unverified beliefs, treating them as established facts. He asserts that such questions are flawed because the questioner himself, the ego, is the source from which these three concepts have arisen. This life, lived based on superficial and crippled knowledge, is like using a crutch. He explains that if one were to scratch the surface of this supposed knowledge, its hollowness would be exposed, revealing that one knows nothing. Acharya Prashant clarifies that a true seeker does not ask questions based on beliefs but questions the beliefs themselves. A real question challenges the very foundation on which one stands. He urges the questioner to examine the ground beneath his feet—what he eats, drinks, how he lives, his thoughts, hopes, fears, and relationships. He asks the questioner to investigate the assumptions and the picture of life he holds. The speaker concludes that spirituality begins with a deep complaint about one's condition. For those who have no complaints, there is no spirituality. While the spiritual journey ends in a state of gratitude where no complaints remain, one must first complain if they have not attained a state of blessedness. This complaint becomes the fire that ultimately leads to that blessedness. Only then is gratitude meaningful. To offer thanks without having attained anything is a deception.