Acharya Prashant addresses a thirty-year-old woman who feels regretful about her past, specifically her forced marriage after the twelfth grade and her current financial dependence. He explains that such life events are not isolated incidents but part of a continuous state of unconsciousness shared by humanity. Using the metaphor of a drunkard stumbling down a road, he suggests that the 'accidents' of life, like a forced marriage at twenty-one, are the inevitable results of a long-standing lack of awareness. He asserts that humanity lives according to a pre-written script dictated by the three modes of nature, which he refers to as the 'book of nature' or 'Maya'. This script governs every action from birth to death, making individual choices often illusory and driven by social or biological conditioning. He challenges the notion of victimhood, stating that while it provides comfort to the ego to blame family or circumstances, it does not lead to freedom. Acharya Prashant points out that the same person who feels victimized might later become an oppressor by imposing similar societal expectations on their own children. He emphasizes that the entire system of human existence is intoxicated by ignorance, and focusing on a single event like marriage is insufficient when the very foundation of one's education and lifestyle is equally unconscious. He urges the questioner to stop blaming the past and to recognize that she is still following the same 'book' in the present. Finally, Acharya Prashant encourages the woman to take action in the present if she truly desires change. He notes that thirty is not too old to pursue education or a different path, but warns that true liberation requires a painful break from past patterns. He compares the individual to a dried rose petal stuck to the pages of a book; to become free, one must be willing to tear oneself away, even if it causes pain or 'bleeding'. He concludes that freedom from the mechanical script of nature is possible only through intense effort and a willingness to pay the price of struggle.