A questioner, who used to be deeply involved in astrology, asks Acharya Prashant how to help his friends and family who are still caught up in it, as his arguments and sharing of videos have not been effective. He notes that he now understands that astrology is physical and does not address consciousness. Acharya Prashant responds by stating that there are countless types of disturbances in the world, and it is futile to count them. He explains that until a person has love for the right goal, a desire to improve, and feels disgust for their current life, some disturbance or another will always captivate them. He says he does not focus on any single issue because if one is resolved, another will take its place. The fundamental problem is not being caught by a specific thing, but the tendency to be caught. A person who does not want to do the right thing will find something to occupy their mind. He clarifies that these things are not let go of through force or argument; they are simply forgotten. They become insignificant when something greater enters one's life. He uses an analogy: "I want Rahul, but I don't know who Rahul is." In this state of ignorance, anyone could be Rahul, so one cannot reject anyone for fear of rejecting the real Rahul. This is the condition of someone who does not know what is truly beneficial for them. They can neither fully accept nor fully reject anything because they are in a state of doubt and risk aversion. The speaker concludes that the root of all such practices and superstitions is the lack of self-knowledge (Atma-gyan). When you do not know who you are and what is truly good or bad for you, you will believe anything. He emphasizes that scientific arguments do not work on a fearful mind. Superstitions are not removed by science but by spirituality and self-knowledge, which is why even great scientists can be superstitious. The only way out is to find out, "Who is Rahul?"