Acharya Prashant explains that the path to spiritual growth involves being pushed toward books and wisdom by those who truly care for one's betterment. Using a verse by Kabir Saheb, he illustrates the relationship between a seeker and a 'Fakir' or spiritual guide. He emphasizes that in the verse, the seeker is not the primary doer; rather, it is the Fakir who initiates the awakening, rescues the seeker from the ocean of worldly existence, and breaks their earthly bonds. The seeker's primary role is one of non-doership and silent cooperation, allowing the guide to perform the necessary work of liberation. He describes the seeker as someone sleeping in their own self-constructed 'temple'—a place of false holiness and comfort—until the Fakir wakes them with the 'arrows' of sharp, piercing words. Acharya Prashant notes that while the seeker might feel humiliated or angry, the correct response is to accept the guidance without retaliation or resistance. He explains that the Fakir provides a single, consistent truth regardless of the diversity of the seeker's worldly questions. This singular focus on the divine might seem boring or repetitive to the intellect, yet the seeker must remain steadfast and not abandon the guide. Furthermore, Acharya Prashant discusses how worldly attachments and 'ornaments' are only recognized as bondages after one is liberated from them. Before liberation, these bondages are celebrated as jewels or the 'spice of life.' He suggests that the Fakir acts to remove these chains, a process that requires the seeker's active cooperation rather than resistance. Ultimately, he concludes that while the guide's wish for the seeker's liberation is eternal, it is the seeker's responsibility to align their own will with that of the guide through surrender and cooperation.