Acharya Prashant addresses a question regarding a verse from the Paramhansa Gita, which uses the metaphor of a merchant being looted by six robbers in a forest. He clarifies that the questioner has misinterpreted the scripture by applying it to external family dynamics and material wealth. The speaker emphasizes that the 'robbers' mentioned are not family members or outsiders, but the internal enemies within oneself: lust, anger, pride, attachment, greed, and jealousy. He points out that the questioner's narrative—of being an honest man whose family is eyeing his hard-earned wealth—is a common cinematic trope rather than a spiritual reality. According to the Gita, the person who is obsessed with accumulating material wealth is lost in ignorance, and the wealth they gather is often a burden rather than a source of true fulfillment. Acharya Prashant explains that true wealth is that which brings spiritual blessedness and remains with a person beyond the physical world. He suggests that if family members are indeed focused on one's material money, it is a reflection of the poor quality of those relationships and the owner's own attachment. He shares a story of a monk who was unbothered when a thief stole his meager belongings, wishing instead that he could give the thief the 'moon'—symbolizing spiritual enlightenment. The speaker urges the questioner to stop viewing themselves as a victim of others' greed and to instead look at their own internal state. He advises moving away from a life built on suspicion and material hoarding, suggesting that one should study spiritual literature and connect with those who live differently to realize that a life based on material attachment is foolish and unnecessary.