Acharya Prashant explains that the mind is an inherent incompleteness, a vacuum that demands to be filled. When an individual does not provide the mind with the right agency or a substantial purpose to bring it to closure, it naturally sucks in miscellaneous and random thoughts as a form of compensation. This addiction to imagination and trivial thinking is merely a symptom of the absence of something significant. The mind does not register this absence directly; instead, it registers the presence of the petty and the trivial, which serves as an unsatisfying alternative to what is truly needed. To overcome this addictive behavior of escaping into imagination, one must find something mammoth and infinitely larger than oneself to be occupied with. Acharya Prashant suggests that unless a person has something substantial to devote their life to, they will remain embroiled in random, flickering nonsense, which acts as a form of punishment. The only way to find rest and make little troubles appear insignificant is to find a large, soothing purpose and drown oneself in it. This shift from the petty to the substantial is the only way to truly fill the mind's vacuum and achieve sobriety from addictive thinking.