Acharya Prashant addresses the common struggle of failing to follow through on plans and resolutions. He explains that this happens because we are not a single, unified individual but rather a crowd of different personalities dictated by various external influences. The person who makes a resolution at night is not the same person who wakes up in the morning; our state of mind changes based on the influences acting upon us at any given moment. Because we lack internal knowledge and spontaneity, we rely on resolutions and external guidance rather than direct action. He further explains that genuine action is spontaneous and does not require resolutions. If one truly perceives a need, such as escaping a fire, they act immediately without planning. The constant craving for company and the inability to be alone stem from an inner void that we desperately try to fill with external things. Acharya Prashant provides a rule of thumb: if a desire or resolution is focused on the future, it is false. Real action occurs in the present moment and is not time-dependent. He concludes that most human desires are false because they are always directed toward the next moment rather than the now.