Acharya Prashant begins by questioning the audience's search habits on platforms like YouTube and Google. He notes that people rarely search for terms like 'liberation,' 'truth,' 'salvation,' 'Nirvana,' 'Vedant,' or 'philosophy.' Consequently, videos on these subjects do not appear in their recommendations. He explains that the only way to disseminate this content is through paid promotion, a step necessitated by a society he describes as very fallen. Without promotion, this knowledge would be lost. The need for such promotion, and by extension donations, will only end when people themselves become capable of recognizing and sharing valuable content. He states that at present, the donations received are less than a tenth of what is required, compelling the foundation to cut salaries and expenses to continue its work. Responding to a questioner's distress about the persistence of the dowry system, despite the abolition of child marriage, Acharya Prashant offers a solution. The questioner shares his personal decision to not take a dowry, a stance that has isolated him from his family and society, and mentions that he found the courage for this in Acharya Prashant's videos. Acharya Prashant replies that the practice of dowry will end when love arrives. He elaborates that when love, consciousness, and responsibility are present, it becomes impossible to demand money from someone as a condition for living with them. Acharya Prashant strongly condemns the practice of dowry, equating it to prostitution. He points out the hypocrisy where a woman taking money for a relationship is called a prostitute, but a man doing the same is called a groom. He affirms the questioner's decision, stating that refusing dowry is not a great revolution but the minimum requirement for being a self-respecting human. He also expresses surprise at women who agree to marry men who demand dowry. When another audience member mentions that girls are often denied education to save for dowry, Acharya Prashant's advice for such girls is to 'run away.' He emphasizes the true purpose of education with the phrase 'Sa Vidya Ya Vimuktaye' (That which liberates is knowledge). He argues that if education, a job, and worldly power do not liberate a person from such foolishness, they are all in vain. He concludes by advising not to let society dominate one's life, asserting that only Truth should hold that supreme place. When asked what those who have already taken dowry should do, he humorously but pointedly suggests they should return it if they have any self-respect.