Acharya Prashant addresses a seeker who is unsure of what to ask, explaining that admitting one's lack of a clear question is a very honest and beautiful starting point. He notes that most people begin with pre-conceptualized images of what they want, which are merely projections of their own minds. The mind is compared to a limited expanse, and the desire to ask questions arises from a fundamental dissatisfaction with these boundaries. He asserts that the ego often tries to claim knowledge of what lies beyond these boundaries, but true inquiry is always about finding peace and tranquility, which are currently missing from one's experience. All meaningful spiritual questions can be reduced to this single search for peace, while other curiosities about techniques or scriptures often just add to the mind's inner chaos. Acharya Prashant emphasizes that a truly inquisitive person asks very little because they realize that questions coming from the limited self cannot lead beyond the self. He distinguishes between seeking answers, which are limited, and seeking solutions, which are immense and dissolve all questions. In a real communication between a teacher and a student, the interaction is not like a formal classroom but more like the spontaneous, wordless connection between a mother and child or between lovers. This communication happens from a point of thoughtlessness, proving that it is possible to act and live from the heart rather than through rigid mental structures. These moments serve as a reminder of one's authentic self, showing that it is possible to live without the constant conflict and planning that usually dominate human life.