Acharya Prashant responds to a question from a woman who asks, "I am so beautiful, what should I do?" He begins by stating, "First of all, understand that you are not that beautiful." He clarifies that the word she should use is not "beautiful" but "attractive." The proof of being attractive is that others are drawn to you. He then questions the nature of this attraction, asking for what purpose others are drawn to her. He explains that when we use clean words, we often hide the reality behind them. When she says, "I am very beautiful," she is actually saying, "I am a very useful thing for the sexual pleasure of young men and men." This is the reality of the situation. He elaborates that if you are beautiful, people are drawn to you, and this is how you know you are beautiful. This means you are useful to others. He asks, for what purpose are they drawn to you? Is it to gain knowledge from you or to discuss international matters? The people who find you attractive want to come to you for a specific reason. He states that when you say you are beautiful, you are essentially saying you are a very suitable and fit thing to provide sexual pleasure to a certain gender. In this, he asks, what do you get? Others get sexual pleasure from you, but what do you receive in return? You might say you also get something, that you don't just give away sexual pleasure for free, that there is a price. This price, he explains, is not openly stated, as that would be prostitution and could lead to jail. So, the price is hidden, taking the form of gifts, a salary, or being kept in a home without doing any work. This, he says, is the deal. Acharya Prashant advises the questioner to do something that benefits her. In the current situation, what she calls her beauty only benefits others. She might get something in return, but he questions the value of what she receives. He argues that beauty is not an asset but a liability, almost like a disease, because your auction begins. When you can get the comforts of life just by being sold, you have no reason to achieve higher things in life through hard work. You lose the incentive to improve your knowledge, skills, or achieve anything. In contrast, an ordinary-looking girl has to study, excel in sports, or show her talent to get respect and attention, which leads to her development. A beautiful girl, however, gets attention without doing anything, which becomes her hell. She thinks she is getting things for free because she is beautiful, but she is actually trading away all the higher possibilities of her consciousness and life for a golden bed, jewelry, and a large TV. He concludes by stating that the worst thing you can do to yourself is to start living off your physical beauty. He tells a Zen story of a beautiful woman who was rejected by Zen masters until she scarred her own face, proving she valued knowledge more than her appearance. He advises that a strong, healthy body is more important than an attractive one. A strong body helps in life's great tasks, whereas an attractive body is often just for others' pleasure. Men are attracted to parts of a woman's body where fat is accumulated, which is related to fertility. Your goal should be the opposite: to reduce fat and build muscle. He urges the questioner not to make the body's beauty her identity.