Acharya Prashant explains that the 'dark suggestions' mentioned by Rumi refer to the unconscious urges and motivations that lead a person to act out of darkness and deepen their misery. He clarifies that there is indeed a plan behind these suggestions, which is for the individual to observe them and eventually get rid of them. However, people often fail to dismantle this plan because they only reject what they perceive as 'bad' while simultaneously accepting something else as 'good'. This relative rejection keeps the central source of all motivations untouched. Acharya Prashant emphasizes that the objective of the world, which acts as a plan or a riddle, is to be seen through and dissolved. To achieve this, one must dismiss not only the dark suggestions but also the bright ones, as both are dualistic sides of the same coin. He points out that love and hate, or brightness and darkness, exist in relation to each other and arise from the same center. True liberation occurs only when the very center from which these contrasting inclinations arise is scrutinized and dismissed, allowing the plan to reach its ultimate resolution.