Acharya Prashant addresses the common concern of whether physical desires like food and sex act as blocks to spiritual realization. He explains that the only real block is the lack of acknowledgement. One should be honest about their likes and dislikes without dressing them up in spiritual or romantic language. Desires lose their sting when they are acknowledged for what they are—physical experiences of the body and tongue rather than soulful or spiritual events. He clarifies that sexual energy is essentially the ego's urge to continue existing in time through procreation. While Prakriti (nature) will continue to express these energies as long as the body exists, one should view sex simply as sex, not as a complex spiritual or tantric ritual. He further explains that spiritual experiences, such as seeing lights or feeling subtle energies, are often just refined forms of physical conditioning and are not intrinsically superior to basic pleasures. He challenges the moral hierarchy that places 'divine' experiences above mundane ones, stating that both are expressions of nature. Regarding the fear of attachment and the responsibility of children, Acharya Prashant notes that a child represents the future and the continuation of the ego's story. However, he emphasizes that the presence or absence of children does not define enlightenment. One can exist in the world without the suffering of attachment, regardless of external circumstances like family life. The goal is to remain in one's original nature rather than being swept away by the stream of nature's demands for continuity.