Acharya Prashant addresses a question regarding sexuality and family pressure to marry, explaining that whether one is attracted to the opposite sex or the same sex, both are forms of intoxication or attachment to the material body. He uses the analogy of two intoxicated people—one climbing a pole and another falling into a pit—to illustrate that while their directions differ, their state of intoxication is the same. He emphasizes that the object of attraction, whether it be women, men, wealth, or prestige, does not fundamentally change the nature of the attachment. The real issue is not who one is attracted to, but whether one is moving toward the Truth or remaining entangled in falsehood and bodily identification. He further explains that the inner emptiness felt by individuals cannot be filled by a man or a woman, regardless of whether the relationship is heterosexual or homosexual. He challenges the notion that societal acceptance or marriage leads to fulfillment, noting that those who follow traditional paths are often just as restless. Acharya Prashant defines the Divine not as an object like a cloud or an animal, but as the very source of one's seeking and the ultimate peace that the mind craves. He asserts that the persistent restlessness and the underlying desire for something unchanging are the true evidence of the Divine. He concludes by advising the questioner to focus on resolving this inner restlessness and seeking the Truth rather than merely changing the 'brand' of their worldly attachments.