Acharya Prashant addresses the common human predicament of knowing something is wrong yet continuing to do it. He begins by questioning whether one truly knows an action is wrong at the very moment of its execution. The knowledge that something is wrong is often present in a calm, reflective state, but this awareness is not available when one is caught up in the act itself. The only knowledge that is of any use is the knowledge that is present with you at that specific moment. Information gathered before or after the moment of action is useless. The speaker explains that any knowledge that is not of the present moment is of no value. He points out that all the knowledge one reads or learns gets accumulated, but it cannot move beyond the place where it is collected. At the moment of action, only one's own consciousness (hosh) is what comes to use, nothing else. The old, accumulated knowledge must be forgotten, and the dreams of the future are also of no use. When something is happening, only that moment is real. If you are conscious in that moment, you will be fine, you will live, you will win. But if you have gathered a lot of information and become unconscious in that moment, then you have gathered that information for nothing. Acharya Prashant further elaborates that it is impossible to know beforehand what is right and what is wrong because life is dynamic. What is right in one place will be wrong in another; what is appropriate on one occasion will be inappropriate on another. For instance, on a suitable occasion and for a proper reason, even murder is appropriate. Therefore, one cannot pre-establish principles about what to do. He criticizes the societal and educational tendency to pre-determine everything, which kills the romance and newness of life. The real, the Truth, is always unexpected (anapekshit) and unpredictable (ananumaaneya). What is predicted is fake. The joy of life is in the unexpected. He advises to stay awake and not feel burdened by the mind, trusting that in the moment, you will know what to do.