Acharya Prashant explains that the effectiveness of visiting religious or sacred places depends entirely on the individual's intent and state of preparation. If a person understands the problems in their life and genuinely seeks improvement, they will receive the appropriate fruits of their actions. However, if one visits merely as a tourist without self-awareness, they will only experience superficial visual pleasure. He clarifies that miracles are not accidental or supernatural occurrences; they are the result of intense hard work, spiritual practice, and preparation. Using the analogy of water turning into steam, he points out that while the transformation at a hundred degrees looks like a sudden miracle, it is actually the culmination of a long process of heating and energy input that was happening internally. He further asserts that the validity of one's beliefs or experiences of miracles is determined by the quality of one's life and mental state. If a person's life remains burdened, restless, and troubled despite claiming to have experienced miracles, then those miracles are meaningless. A true miracle or a correct path must lead to a state of joy, freedom, and liberation. Acharya Prashant emphasizes that instead of worrying about public opinion or scientific misconceptions, one must look at their own internal experience. If the quality of life is poor, no amount of logic or miraculous claims can justify one's current state or beliefs.