Acharya Prashant explains that the spiritual path is not about asking what to do, but about one's own experience. He urges the questioner to look at their daily experiences, asking, "Don't you know what they are like?" He gives the example of being late for the office and the heart pounding with fear of the boss, questioning if one is truly unaware of what this feeling is. While one might try to cover up this reality with beautiful words, the truth is that one is going to a place that induces fear. The speaker states that if a person is truly unaware of how their life is going, then no guru, scripture, or spirituality can be of help. The spiritual journey begins only when one first acknowledges that there is a problem. If one claims not to know whether a problem exists, no beginning can be made. He poses a choice: if life is going well, let it be; but if it is not, why allow it to continue? Acharya Prashant asserts that the issue is not a lack of knowledge about the problem, but a refusal to accept it as a problem. He points out that people often consider their problems to be their achievements, which prevents any solution from being found. Many of life's biggest problems are not accidental but are achievements earned through deliberate effort. People celebrate acquiring these problems, so they later lack the courage to admit they are problems. This is not ignorance but dishonesty. The speaker contrasts spirituality with worldly education. In a university, one is given external knowledge, like history, which one cannot know on their own. Spirituality, however, is a different process. It does not provide external knowledge but challenges and cuts through the dishonesty within. It reveals what one already knows but is hiding from oneself. Spirituality shows that what happens in life is not accidental; one is actively doing it every day and using the excuse of "not knowing" to continue. This is not ignorance but unrighteousness (adharma).