Acharya Prashant addresses a question regarding the purpose of the universe's creation and why noise exists if silence and joy are our natural states. He suggests that pondering such grand, theoretical questions often distracts from the actual reality of one's daily life. He argues that people are frequently consumed by ordinary concerns like ambition, security, and fear, yet they prefer to ask abstract spiritual questions that have little to do with their immediate existence. He posits that the more hypothetical and useless a question is, the more it is mistakenly labeled as 'spiritual'. He explains that the noise and suffering we experience are the results of unnecessary action and the effort to obtain what is already present. He points out that no one is born feeling incomplete; rather, society conditions individuals to believe they are lacking something. This conditioning leads to a lifelong pursuit of self-worth and achievement to fill a void that never truly existed. Acharya Prashant concludes that human life often becomes a foolish process of trying to cure a non-existent disease or searching for something that was never lost, emphasizing that silence is already there until one tries to do something with it.