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00:00The common man has more freedom today than he ever had in history.
00:05The common man is far, far richer in spite of the income inequality.
00:10We know this body better than we ever did.
00:13And we have conquered the plagues of the past.
00:16See how empowered we are today.
00:18Now my question is, what have we done to deserve this?
00:23Have we?
00:25It is being divided into two parts.
00:27And there are intellects who are making better and better technology.
00:31And there is another part where people are getting dumped.
00:34So there have been recent reports where the intellect of the people, the IQ is declining.
00:40Nothing can be really foolproof.
00:43Because foolishness is a progression and infinite.
00:47We haven't suddenly grown stupid.
00:49More or less we were like this always.
00:53So we are still that animal.
00:55Just freshly out of jungle.
00:58We are like star kids.
01:00This is the biggest act of historical nepotism.
01:03We know nothing.
01:04But we have inherited all of it on a platter.
01:08Somebody else is doing it and making it available to us at a very affordable price.
01:13We have obtained something that we really didn't deserve to obtain.
01:22Pranam Acharji.
01:24I am a math major and what I see in today's society is that there is sudden advancement in technology.
01:33In past two decades there has been a huge difference.
01:36And behind this revolution there are intellects, intelligent people working behind.
01:41But I see there is a bifurcation in the society.
01:44It is being divided into two parts.
01:46When there are intellects who are making better and better technology.
01:51And there is another part where people are getting dumped.
01:55So there have been recent reports where the intellect of the people, the IQ is declining at a great speed.
02:03And there has been quite a new term to this named as brain rot.
02:07So I want your insights upon this.
02:09Why is this bifurcation happening and what we can do to reduce this gap?
02:16Like any other part of the body, the brain goes dysfunctional if not used.
02:27Right?
02:30You wanted to know stuff.
02:34You had to ask, think who to ask, receive information, analyze, conclude.
02:44A lot of that was slowly taken over by Google.
02:51But even with Google you needed to exercise choice.
02:55There were so many results.
02:57You still needed to think for yourself to a great degree.
03:03Now there is AI.
03:06Entire thinking, entire decision making can be outsourced.
03:13Right?
03:14A lot of people, they might be staying at a particular place since years.
03:22But leave them without Google Maps and they'll struggle reaching even familiar places.
03:35Because that faculty is no more being exercised.
03:39So that's what is happening.
03:41We are very conveniently leaving ourselves more and more at the mercy of technology, which will work out for us to some extent.
04:02But we have to understand that AI, for example, operates on data.
04:13And data is provided by human beings.
04:17Garbage in, garbage out.
04:21If we are dumb, our data will reflect that dumbness.
04:28And that dumbness will then be institutionalized by AI.
04:36Or if we are biased, our data will reflect that bias.
04:43And AI will be biased without even being trained to be biased.
04:49But it will just consume data that we have generated.
04:57So technology is a wonderful thing, but it cannot illuminate the insides of mankind.
05:09So you can have great technology, but all of that will be used only to do more of what you want.
05:27Right?
05:28As simple as that.
05:32As simple as that.
05:35Economics, science, maths, all of that will be put to use in the service of our darkness.
05:50Right?
05:51Those who think of the future as something necessarily great and wonderful,
06:03because human knowledge and consequent technology are expanding and improving,
06:13their hope is misplaced.
06:19In fact, more powerful technology in the hands of those who just do not know what to do with it,
06:30is actually much more dangerous than not having that capable of technology at all.
06:41Do not we want to keep guns away from kids?
06:46Do we allow kids to operate even our humble mixers and grinders in the kitchen?
07:03They will find a way to get hurt.
07:10Nothing can be really foolproof because foolishness is a progression and infinite.
07:21Right?
07:22What is it that is threatening our very survival today?
07:33as a species and as one member of the large community of sentient beings, among conscious species, we are just one among millions, millions.
07:58How is it that suddenly we discover that not just the survival of one of them, but actually the survival of all the species on the planet stands threatened?
08:16How has that happened?
08:17We were hearing none of it even fifty years back.
08:22How is it so suddenly, so abruptly upon us?
08:26A lot of the answer is about advances in technology.
08:40We haven't suddenly grown stupid.
08:46Yes, we might have reduced our capacity to think, know, attend, understand.
08:59That doesn't mean that we have suddenly become a wicked species.
09:04More or less, we were like this always.
09:10And when I say always, I don't mean millions of years.
09:14As a sentient species, we are barely 40-50 or 80,000 years old.
09:23And that is nothing when it comes to the journey of evolution.
09:28We are still on that journey.
09:31Which means we are still very animalistic.
09:35Probably it will take us another 2-3 million years to grow to the point where intelligence can be called as wisdom.
09:48Think of it.
09:50Think of it.
09:51Just around 50 years back, we were still learning the basics of communication.
10:03Language and thought were extremely rudimentary.
10:07And we were living off the jungle.
10:10And we were able to build those roots and twigs and leaves and such things.
10:18And if we could afford them some small animal catch.
10:25That's who we are.
10:26It's still the jungle at heart.
10:31That's what we carry.
10:3450,000 years is nothing, right? Compared to the entire span, the evolutionary timeline,
10:4250,000 years is nothing, which means we are very raw, very, very raw. And we still need
10:53something like millions of years to grow deeper in wisdom. Here, I'm assuming that wisdom
11:00can be a product of evolution. And if it can't be a product of evolution, then the situation
11:08is even more gloomy. So, we are still that animal, just freshly out of jungle. And what
11:24do we suddenly have? Fancy gadgets and lovely missiles. Shining, polished, sexy, you feel
11:40like going kissing them. Wow, that's the latest ICBM. You feel like showing it off, no? Countries
11:50do show off their latest toys, once a year or something. Don't they? All countries do that,
11:58many countries at least. Like kids do. When kids get a new toy, don't they flaunt it to
12:06the neighbour? See, this is what I got. So, nations too do that. See, this is my latest
12:13missile. That's who we are. Call us animals, call us kids, but that's who we are. The only
12:25problem is, the missile is not a toy. Given who we are, the maximum we deserved was toys.
12:37But unfortunately, what we have is real destructive power. Real destructive power. And when you
12:47have destructive power, you will destroy that and this both. And that is evident in deforestation,
12:55in extinction of species, in the climate crisis, on the external front. Right? And that is evident
13:06in the corruption of man's inner potential when it comes to the inside. Why aren't we thinking
13:19as clearly? Why are IQ levels going down? Because in a quirk of evolution, we have obtained something
13:35that we really didn't deserve to obtain. We all want power. But power can be very destructive. Not
13:50just to others. Self-destructive. If you don't deserve power. We want freedom. But freedom can be the
14:02first thing you can have, if you don't deserve freedom. To our kids and pets. Do we give unlimited
14:12freedom? Do we? We wait for them to ripen. Or we try our best to help them mature and ripen. And that's
14:25true. Even we say now, you are internally free, so you deserve more external freedom as well.
14:32But look at our historical position today. The common man has more freedom today than he ever had in history.
14:41Right? Think of kings and queens and autocracies and feudalistic societies. Was there freedom? Social, political
14:52freedom, political freedom? Was there freedom? No. Today we have so much freedom. Even in societies like,
15:02like let's say Iran or China, where democracy is absent, still people have a degree of freedom that far
15:16surpasses the degree of freedom the citizenry had even under the most benevolent monarchs. We know of the
15:28great names from the past. Even those greats couldn't give the kind of freedom to their populations. That today,
15:41an undemocratic place like China gives or Iran or even Russia. So we have freedom. The per capita income of the world
15:57world today is higher than it ever was in its history. The common man is far, far richer in spite of the income inequality.
16:04In spite of the income inequality. So we have far more money at our disposal. You can spend and that is power.
16:15In terms of the body, we live longer today than we ever did. We know about food. We know about nutrition. We have labs. We know biochemistry. We know this body better than we ever did.
16:42And we have conquered. And we have conquered. And we have conquered the plagues of the past. In fact, so many of the terrible diseases that resulted in epidemics do not even exist now, at least in the developed world.
16:59world. You won't find, for example, cases of polio or titanus in the developed world. They are gone. So it's plague. Think of the black plague and what it did to the Europe. It's gone.
17:16So we have health. And we have medical insurance. And we have hospitals we can rely on. And we are coming to a situation where natural death can be postponed by several decades.
17:38So if you want to die, you will have to do something extraordinary. Like really hiring a train or something.
18:00That's how empowered we are today. We live longer. We have money. We are enfranchised. We can vote. Knowledge. We have so much knowledge. Look at the common man.
18:19The smartphone has revolutionized so much. Look at the humble auto driver or the rickshaw puller. Or somebody running a small corner side grocery shop. They are always busy on the mobile. A lot of that is just wastage.
18:45And yet, yet, yet, they are receiving information. At least if they choose to. Information is available, handy. We have all of this. So we stand at a very privileged point in our journey.
19:03There is so much resources. Tell me what you want and you can import it. If you like vegetables from New Zealand, sitting here in Hyderabad, you can have them. Not just once. Every day.
19:19Every day. Provided you are prepared to pay. You want stuff that is not available in stores here. Clothes or whatever or whatever or fancy gadgets or watches or shoes or specs. Something. Anything.
19:35You have global carriers. You have global carriers. They will deliver it at your doorstep. See how empowered we are today.
19:43Now my question is, what have we done to deserve this? What have we done to deserve this? Have we? No.
19:59We are like star kids. This is the biggest act of historical nepotism. We are eating out of the benevolent hands of history.
20:21Look at the common youngster today. 10, 12, 14, 16 years of age. So privileged. And internally so entitled. I must have this. I must have that.
20:34You understand the smartphone you are carrying in on your palm. It is a very, very advanced computing machine. In fact, it is a computer.
20:44It is a computer with a powerful processor. Do you understand? And if it were left to you, how many centuries will you take to assemble it, let alone manufacture it?
21:04But you say, no, this one I don't want. The latest one is in the market. I want that. I want that. I am entitled.
21:14You think this is how it works? Yeah? You understand the subtle intelligence and the sophistication of thoughts that goes into constructing that machine? No.
21:30We know nothing. We know nothing. But we have inherited all of it on a platter. Somebody else is doing it and making it available to us at a very affordable price.
21:43You see this. There is no struggle. Obviously, we don't want to return to days when we had to struggle even for two quarter meals. No. We don't want that.
21:58But that's the nature of this organism. You take away all the struggle and it will shrivel. And so much has been provided to us. You just buy a plane ticket and you can land somewhere, Paris, Singapore, wherever you want to.
22:25Think of the distance. Please think of the distance. And then think of the capacity of these legs.
22:32And if the flight is delayed by half an hour, we say no. You might as well beat up the ground staff. The airlines are scared.
22:48The airlines are scared. Tell this fellow to walk straight from here till there and this fellow can't. But this one wants to be dot on time for a 10,000 km journey. No, not journey. Flight.
23:10Do we understand what it means to lift that mass of metal to 35,000 feet? 35,000 feet. Imagine. Imagine. And there is that huge metal mass. Look at the weight.
23:30What is pulling it up? Some god in the sky? Something has gone into it. But what has gone into it is not of our own. We are just receivers. Receivers.
23:52And if we just keep receiving. If we just keep receiving. Something inside refuses to blossom. We remain a bonsai within.
24:08Huh? All these powers and perks and privileges we have that were not available to our ancestors just around 100, 200 years back. Right? Hmm?
24:25We are like 1000 times more empowered. Are we not? My question is, to be 1000 times more empowered, are we actually 1000 times better than them? And if we aren't 1000 times better, how do we deserve it?
24:47How do we deserve it? There has to be some proportionality. We understand, historically there are skews. But this kind of skew, in fact, it is quite possible that our ancestors were more solid men and stronger women than we today are.
25:14It is quite possible. And yet they struggled and suffered. And here we are, enjoying life, as if we are entitled to.
25:31Do we see this? That is what is happening. And with each passing generation, it will only get worse.
25:42We don't have probably too many generations left now, given the climate spectre. But it will keep getting worse till it comes to the point of implosion.
25:53We will collapse from within. We are collapsing from within. With so much available on the outside, and very little inside, we are using, misusing, whatever we have on the outside, to destroy not just ourselves, but the entire planet, the entire ecosystem.
26:22Yes, we were always violent. But we never had the means for the kind of mass slaughter that we commit today. Right? Tribes would fight among each other and beat the other up using fists and stones or maybe swords.
26:50Now, how many can you kill using a mere sword? But today, first of all, you are internally darker. And instead of the sword, you have an automatic machine firing like several rounds per second, with a range of kilometers.
27:16Same thing about killing animals. Yes. We were always killing animals. But then, if you wanted to have a fish, you would have to go and fish. Today, you have mechanized trawlers.
27:34Kill indiscriminately. Kill as much as you want to. Laws have to be enacted to prevent us from killing beyond a point.
27:52Kill indiscriminately.
28:00Our external privilege is just too disproportionate.
28:05And our internal development hasn't kept pace.
28:12Internally, we are still the savage, the caveman.
28:16And externally, we have...
28:20What do you want?
28:29Yes, sir, what may I serve you?
28:35And the external growth is visible.
28:43And the internal darkness is not.
28:49So we stand blinded by these lights.
28:53We feel if it's so illumined on the outside,
28:58internally too, there must be at least some visibility.
29:03No, there is none.
29:05In fact, the external growth
29:12is a big self-deception.
29:16We feel we have so much, we must be somebodies.
29:20I mean, if I'm really a savage,
29:22many of you might be actually wondering,
29:25internally protesting,
29:26if we were really savages,
29:29I mean, how come we are here in this auditorium?
29:33Isn't this a product of man's civilization?
29:38And if we are sitting in this civilized place,
29:40how come you are calling us a savage?
29:43That's the danger.
29:46Looking at this, it becomes
29:48very possible,
29:51very tempting to deceive oneself.
29:56I must be internally also somebody.
30:00I must be somebody.
30:07Right?
30:07You suddenly get money
30:14from somewhere
30:15as is happening these days.
30:20Some random event involving just chance.
30:25And a lot of people suddenly find a windfall gain.
30:29Is that not happening?
30:30That's happening
30:33very obviously in the north.
30:36I don't know that's happening in the south to that extent.
30:42And when you have that much money,
30:45it becomes difficult to still remain grounded
30:49and tell yourself in spite of the money,
30:51I am the same old,
30:57unlearned fellow.
31:01You see, now you have money.
31:03So you'll walk into a store,
31:06some glossy brand,
31:09and somebody will come and say,
31:11Sir,
31:13Sir,
31:14what may I serve you?
31:16And that convinces us
31:19that we are
31:19that convinces us
31:22that we are
31:22somebody.
31:25Earlier it was some humble dhaba.
31:29And in some sense,
31:32that was less dangerous
31:33because nobody
31:34was trying
31:36to convince you
31:37that you are somebody.
31:39But now you walk into a restaurant
31:41or a hotel
31:42or some place.
31:44And how does the receptionist
31:45greet?
31:48Sir,
31:49I am all for you.
31:51Not just at your service
31:52but at your disposal.
31:55Sir,
31:56please tell me
31:57what can I do to
31:58you know,
32:00offer you pleasure.
32:03And you feel
32:04that if lady
32:05is actually rolling out
32:07whatever,
32:08red carpet or
32:09you must be.
32:12You must be
32:13somebody.
32:15Now that's a problem.
32:15that's a problem.
32:22What to do with it?
32:24Obviously,
32:25if there is
32:26this asymmetry,
32:28it has to be corrected.
32:30One way is
32:31reduce what you have
32:34on the outside.
32:34that can be a possible option
32:39but that should be
32:41not the preferred option.
32:44The better way is
32:45to keep pace
32:47with what you have there
32:49on the outside.
32:51Grow internally
32:52so that you deserve
32:54what you have externally.
32:56you deserve what you have externally.
33:04Otherwise, it is indignity.
33:09Otherwise, it is offensive.
33:10You, for example,
33:16if you know you are not the
33:18not the topper of your college
33:19or class
33:20or stream university
33:21and your name is called out,
33:23please come to the podium
33:26to receive the university gold medal.
33:28Would you walk up?
33:34Would you?
33:35Why not?
33:37One is the fear of being caught.
33:39Let's say that fear is no more there.
33:41Then,
33:42then,
33:44you would probably still not do that.
33:47for the sake of your own self-respect.
33:54It's an inner thing.
33:56If I don't deserve something,
33:58I must not have it.
34:01Now,
34:02that's what.
34:03We already have so many things.
34:05Let's grow internally
34:07to deserve them.
34:12Otherwise,
34:13you will have the power to vote.
34:16Internally,
34:16you will not know how to vote.
34:19So, you will vote
34:19for the kind of people you vote
34:21and then get the kind of governments
34:24you do.
34:27And then you will wonder
34:28why is the nation in such a mess?
34:31Because you are the voter.
34:34You have been given the right to vote
34:36without being educated
34:37how to vote.
34:41So, there is an asymmetry
34:42and it's fatal.
34:44Am I reaching out
34:53or has it
34:54started on a...
34:56Hello, sir.
34:57I am Harshit, coming from Bangalore.
35:09My question is
35:11sort of a follow-up
35:12to the discussion.
35:14Regarding
35:15my own
35:17things,
35:19like, for example,
35:19I was searching
35:20the word
35:20Adhyatma
35:21in Google.
35:22I got the
35:24explainer videos
35:24on what is
35:26Adhyatma.
35:27So,
35:28I want to understand
35:29how do I understand
35:32that
35:32these videos
35:34which are
35:34in the top
35:35recommendations
35:36of this search
35:37will do me good
35:39or
35:39what is
35:40the founding
35:40principle
35:41or first
35:42principles
35:42I should go to
35:43and how to
35:44understand that
35:44process
35:45to learn this
35:46better.
35:46What Google
35:47is giving you
35:47is just
35:48information.
35:50And you must know
35:50this is what
35:51Google has told me.
35:54First page
35:54and number of
35:55results,
35:56that's fine.
35:57That's what
35:57Google is thinking.
36:00That's what
36:01the algorithm
36:02is telling you.
36:03Why should that
36:06become your
36:07thought
36:07without
36:09investigation?
36:10Yes,
36:11we accept
36:12that
36:12as a bit
36:14of info.
36:16An intelligent
36:17system called
36:18Google
36:19has thrown up
36:20these recommendations.
36:21That's fine.
36:23So,
36:24I take that
36:24as information.
36:25There is an
36:26intelligent system
36:26and this is what
36:27that system is
36:28recommending.
36:29Fine,
36:29taken.
36:31But my
36:31work
36:32begins after
36:33that,
36:34right?
36:35You have told me
36:36something,
36:36you have told me
36:37something and all
36:37of you are
36:38intelligent people.
36:39Fine,
36:40but that does
36:41not relieve me
36:42of my work
36:43or does it?
36:44You have done
36:45your work,
36:45Google has done
36:46what it's
36:48programmed to do.
36:49But are you
36:50doing what
36:51you are born
36:52to do?
36:55Google gave
36:56you information.
36:57Now apply
36:58your consciousness
36:58on that.
37:02somebody is
37:03telling you
37:03about the
37:04meaning of
37:04you said
37:04Adhyatma.
37:06That's fine.
37:06That's what
37:07that person
37:07is telling.
37:08Take that.
37:09Why should we
37:10deprive ourselves
37:11of information?
37:13It's a public
37:14good.
37:16Available to
37:16everybody.
37:17Take it.
37:18Take it and
37:19then apply
37:19your own mind
37:21to it.
37:22Where is the
37:23proof?
37:25Yes,
37:25you are saying
37:26something and
37:26you carry a
37:27reputation
37:27of whatever
37:30kind.
37:32But here I
37:34am.
37:35I don't
37:36stand as a
37:37box, as a
37:38basket.
37:40I stand as
37:41a sentient
37:43entity.
37:46So I'll
37:46apply my
37:47discretion.
37:49Vivek,
37:50you are saying
37:51this is Adhyatma.
37:52How exactly?
37:54Yes, I
37:54understand, sir.
37:55This is what
37:55you are offering
37:56me.
37:57But can you
37:57kindly explain?
38:00Alright.
38:01To this
38:01extent you
38:02could explain.
38:03I'm still
38:04not satisfied.
38:05So I'll go
38:06to that person
38:06now.
38:08I'll go to
38:09that one.
38:09And that
38:10doesn't mean
38:10that the next
38:11thing that I
38:11get will be
38:12totally
38:13explanatory.
38:16Ultimately,
38:17it's about
38:18my own
38:19discretion.
38:21And your
38:22own discretion
38:22may land you
38:23at a place
38:24nobody advises
38:25you to be.
38:28You may
38:28come to a
38:29meaning that
38:31Google may
38:31never offer
38:32you.
38:33And that's
38:34fine.
38:35Equally,
38:36you might
38:36find that
38:37the very
38:38first search
38:39result is
38:39very useful.
38:40That too
38:41is fine.
38:43But the
38:43conclusion
38:44must be
38:45individual.
38:47You cannot
38:48outsource
38:49your
38:50consciousness
38:51business to
38:51Google.
38:52You cannot
38:53outsource the
38:54very intimate
38:55work of
38:56life to
38:57an inanimate
38:58system.
39:03If thinking,
39:05understanding,
39:06knowing is
39:09to be outsourced
39:10to a
39:10machine.
39:12That is the
39:13equivalent of
39:14outsourcing even
39:15love to a
39:16machine.
39:21Google,
39:21can you
39:22please,
39:23please my
39:23girlfriend on
39:24my behalf?
39:24and in
39:27some sense,
39:28Google can
39:28do a
39:29better job
39:29of it
39:30than many
39:32of us,
39:32most of
39:33us.
39:35But would
39:36you?
39:37Would you?
39:38No.
39:38Because it's
39:39not a job.
39:40There's
39:41something more
39:41to it.
39:44Already
39:44happening?
39:46Nice.
39:50Think on
39:50my behalf,
39:51eat on my
39:52behalf,
39:52sleep on my
39:53behalf,
39:53love on my
39:55behalf,
39:55then live on
39:56my behalf.
39:57Why do we
39:58even need to
39:58exist?
40:01Or do we?
40:04If everything
40:05is to be done
40:05by machines,
40:07why do we
40:08need to
40:09stand here?
40:19A machine
40:20can be a
40:21better
40:22processor.
40:23But remember,
40:23even the
40:26machine has
40:27human consciousness
40:28at its
40:30base.
40:31So you have
40:32to be careful.
40:34Google didn't
40:35write its own
40:36code.
40:39You did.
40:41So whatever
40:41we have,
40:45our excellence,
40:48our brilliance,
40:49our flaws,
40:50our flaws,
40:51our prejudices,
40:52all of it
40:53goes into
40:54the code
40:54as well.
40:58Right?
41:00Remember,
41:01you are the
41:02user.
41:03Remember
41:03yourself.
41:05That's real
41:06adhyatma,
41:07remembering
41:07yourself.
41:08You are
41:09the user.
41:11User,
41:12doer,
41:12actor,
41:13consumer.
41:14You are
41:14the ego.
41:15ego.
41:16You are
41:16the ego.
41:19And the ego
41:20always has
41:20a choice.
41:23And it's
41:23using this
41:24choice that
41:25the ego
41:25elevates
41:26itself.
41:29It's by
41:30use of
41:30the choice
41:31that the
41:33self
41:33elevates
41:34itself.
41:35And that's
41:35liberation.
41:36if you
41:38don't
41:38exercise
41:38choice,
41:40there is
41:41no elevation.
41:42And if
41:43there is
41:43no elevation,
41:44then there
41:44is no
41:44difference
41:44between
41:45man and
41:46stone.
41:47Then there
41:48is no
41:48point
41:49living.
41:54Yes.
41:58Hello
41:59everyone.
42:00Namaskar.
42:01My name
42:02is Renuka
42:02Paliwal.
42:03I am
42:04working as
42:04a resident
42:04doctor in
42:06Dr.
42:06RML
42:07Hospital
42:07for past
42:08three years.
42:09I have
42:09been connected
42:10to Acharya
42:11Ji's teaching
42:11for last
42:12three years
42:13through the
42:13YouTube.
42:14And I
42:15have been
42:15connected
42:15to the
42:16Gita
42:17community
42:17through
42:17Acharya
42:18Prashant
42:18app
42:18for last
42:19two years.
42:20The
42:20changes
42:21which
42:21Gita
42:22sessions
42:22bring in
42:23your life
42:23are
42:24unexpressible.
42:26It's
42:26actually
42:27life-changing.
42:28The
42:28people
42:28who are
42:29listening
42:29Acharya
42:30on the
42:30YouTube,
42:32please
42:32come
42:32join the
42:33Gita
42:33community
42:34on
42:34Acharya
42:35Shant
42:35app
42:35as
42:36there
42:36are
42:3716
42:38plus
42:38live
42:39sessions
42:40which
42:41Acharya
42:41is
42:41taking
42:42and
42:42then
42:42there
42:43are
42:436-7
42:44Gita
42:44exams
42:441000
42:45plus
42:46recordings
42:47are
42:47there
42:47and
42:48you
42:48can
42:48ask
42:49questions
42:49and
42:50sometime
42:51you
42:51can
42:51allow
42:52to
42:52get
42:53directly
42:54sessions
42:55life-changing
42:56and
42:57please
42:57please
42:57join
42:58Gita
42:59community
42:59people
43:01who
43:01are
43:01listening
43:02Acharya
43:02on
43:02YouTube
43:03has
43:06the
43:07Bo
43:08huh
43:12I
43:14can't
43:14see you
43:16as
43:17I
43:18say you
43:20can't
43:21see you
43:22as
43:22as
43:23as
43:24I
43:24can't
43:25see you
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