A questioner asks Acharya Prashant for advice regarding his 16-year-old son. He wishes to introduce his son to spirituality, but the boy's grandparents object, arguing that he is too young and should first enjoy life, just as kings in ancient times would only enter the Vanaprastha (forest-dwelling) stage after having enjoyed their kingdom. Acharya Prashant responds by suggesting that the questioner should take all the spiritual books and give them to his parents instead. He points out the contradiction in their argument: if the son is too young, then the parents, who are in their Vanaprastha years, are of the right age to read them. He asserts that if they had read these books, they would not be making such statements. It is only those who have not read the Gita who claim it is meant for old age. He questions the age of Arjun when he received the Gita's teachings, noting that Arjun was not old and was, in fact, about to renounce his duties, a move that the Gita prevented. Similarly, the disciples in the Upanishads are young, not 90-year-olds on their deathbeds. Acharya Prashant criticizes the notion of waiting until one's life is completely ruined before seeking essential knowledge. He paints a picture of a 90-year-old with trembling hands and failing eyesight trying to read the Gita, highlighting the absurdity of such a delay. This, he says, is an example of false knowledge. The most crucial knowledge should not be postponed. He laments that the very elders who demand respect based on their age are the ones making such foolish arguments. He refers to a video titled, "We will listen to grandpa, not the Gita," and recounts absurd arguments made by such elders, like, "Did Krishna give birth to you?" or "When you were a baby, you defecated in our laps, and now you remember Krishna?" He describes these elders as enemies to the well-being of their own families. He further explains that if parents do not provide their children with true knowledge, the market will become their new father, shaping their values and ideals. He emphasizes that every spiritual book is a life-giving elixir for a 16-year-old, and no belief or person should stand in the way of a young person accessing this knowledge. Recalling his own childhood, he mentions that his father's library was instrumental in his development. He concludes by advising that to reclaim a child from the market's influence, one must take them to Krishna. It is only in the presence of Krishna that the parent, the child, and the divine can unite.