Acharya Prashant addresses a questioner who claims to have studied various scriptures like the Bhagavad Gita, Ashtavakra Gita, and the teachings of Kabir Saheb and Osho, yet remains fearful and unhappy. He challenges the questioner by asking how much of these teachings have actually been implemented in life. He explains that people often set distant, lofty goals like 'becoming a witness' as a way to avoid taking immediate, practical steps. He emphasizes that Shri Krishna’s teaching of Karma Yoga requires Arjun to renounce personal duties and ego-driven actions to do what is right without attachment to results. If one does not follow the prescription of the 'doctor' (the teacher or scripture), one cannot blame the medicine for not working. Acharya Prashant points out that most people actually live according to the 'prescriptions' of society, ancestors, and popular culture rather than spiritual wisdom. He notes that while people are quick to defend their family's honor, they easily disregard the teachings of Shri Krishna. He argues that people's lives are often 'scripted' or 'filmy,' following social traditions and the advice of relatives or celebrities instead of spiritual truth. He asserts that if one's life is in ruins, the blame lies with the worldly influences one actually follows, not the scriptures one merely reads or listens to as background noise. True spiritual study requires the same sincerity as preparing for an academic exam and the courage to implement changes in one's daily life.