In response to a question about how to decide if an action is right or wrong amidst constant confusion and doubt, Acharya Prashant advises to live with that state of not knowing. When you do not know what is happening, the one thing to do is to not give yourself the false assurance that you know. You are in a very awake state, with just a little distance to go. You are conscious that you do not know. Unconsciousness is when it takes over you, and you say, 'I know.' Your situation is very good; keep it that way. If you don't know, then you don't know. Keep what is, as it is. Do not give it a confusing, falsely reassuring name, no matter the price you have to pay. Acharya Prashant illustrates this with examples. If you are in an interview and are asked if you are sure you want the job, and you are not sure, you should say, 'I am not sure.' Similarly, if you are attracted to someone and they ask if you are sure you love them, do not say 'yes' just to please them. If you are not sure, say, 'I can't say,' even if you have to pay a price for it. Those who do not know, interestingly, know something because of which they do not know. You know something that is not letting you have the illusion that you know. When you can see your own state—how much you do not know—you will also be able to see how the world is running. In the world, no one knows anything, but everyone is moving as if they know everything. Seeing this will give you freedom from the world. It is a world of fools. How can I trust it? Here, no one knows anything, but everyone acts as if they know everything. I do not know either, but I know this much: that I do not know. Life itself is breaking the illusions of those who think they know. Their day-to-day life is an accident, a series of mishaps. The suffering you experience is proof of your delusion. The cause of your suffering is nothing but your own delusions.