Acharya Prashant addresses the issue of sexual thoughts and desires by emphasizing that life is too short to waste on momentary excitement that offers no liberation. He explains that the body is naturally designed for self-preservation and expansion, which manifests as lust. Instead of trying to suppress these thoughts, he suggests a strategy of postponement—telling the desire to 'come tomorrow'—while immersing oneself in a meaningful, higher purpose. He clarifies that the body is like a neighbor; one should maintain a distance and not let it become the master of the house. True freedom comes from being occupied with 'Ram's work,' which includes any selfless, creative, or compassionate endeavor that transcends the ego. He further discusses the nature of the ego and its attachment to the body, noting that the ego seeks truth but is unwilling to dissolve itself. Acharya Prashant highlights that most human relationships are based on self-interest and bodily identification rather than true love. He encourages the questioner to practice 'Sadhana,' which he defines as the act of going against one's own habitual tendencies and mental patterns. By becoming a 'witness' to the body's impulses and maintaining a gap between the impulse and the action, one can achieve liberation. Ultimately, he asserts that the world is a projection of one's own internal state; when one's internal interests change, the external world is perceived differently.