Must Watch: We’ll Prove Acharya Prashant Is Wrong About Life. ‪@Arpit_Explains‬ ‪@Rational_Mishra‬

Must Watch: We’ll Prove Acharya Prashant Is Wrong About Life. ‪@Arpit_Explains‬ ‪@Rational_Mishra‬

Timestamps: 0:00 – Intro: The Real Meaning of Purpose in Life 8:22 – Everyone has a different purpose in life 14:14 – Spirituality brings long term peace 21:18 – Maturity is important 26:42 – Is being a housewife worthless? 30:49 – Everyone has a journey; you can’t force them towards a higher purpose 46:02 – Unnecessary pride in religion, politics, and cricket 52:48 – Is the West jealous of India? A MUST WATCH for every seeker, skeptic, and spiritual follower. In this explosive episode of Candid Exchange, we go deep into the mind of modern-day spirituality — and prove why Acharya Prashant’s philosophy, though logical and sharp, isn’t meant for everyone. We’ve all heard him talk about the purpose of life, happiness, suffering, and freedom from desire. But how many of us have stopped to question — 👉 Is this true wisdom, or just another illusion wrapped in logic? 👉 Are we genuinely becoming free, or are we getting trapped in new mental frameworks of guilt, morality, and superiority? Through real conversations, psychology, and philosophy, we break down how Acharya Prashant’s teachings often replace one form of conditioning with another. We contrast this with how thinkers like Osho, Gautam Buddha, and even Jiddu Krishnamurti approached awakening — not as an intellectual pursuit, but as a lived realization of truth. 🌿 In This Episode: Why Acharya Prashant’s logic feels powerful yet subtly manipulative How the search for higher consciousness can deepen ego and suffering The difference between understanding and living wisdom Why Gautam Buddha’s path of awareness and Osho’s celebration of life offered freedom — not fear The illusion of “saving the world” through intellectual enlightenment Why the purpose of life might be an illusion created by the restless mind The thin line between spiritual growth and self-deception 💭 Why This Matters Today’s generation is obsessed with clarity, logic, and awakening — but somewhere, we’ve started treating spirituality like a performance. Many people who follow teachers like Acharya Prashant, Osho, Sadhguru, or Buddha are unknowingly chasing happiness as an achievement, instead of peace as an experience. In this raw, unfiltered discussion, we explore the psychology behind spiritual belief systems — how they start from truth but often end in intellectual ego and emotional numbness. We’re not here to cancel or glorify anyone — our aim is to separate truth from theatrics, depth from drama, and awareness from illusion. 🕉️ What You’ll Take Away A clearer understanding of suffering and why it’s essential for awakening How to find purpose without getting trapped by philosophies The difference between thinking freely and thinking spiritually Why truth can’t be owned, preached, or branded — only lived. 🎙️ About This Episode Hosted by Candid Exchange, this conversation challenges spiritual dogma, social media gurus, and the new-age obsession with “finding yourself.” Whether you follow Acharya Prashant, admire Osho, or resonate with Buddha, this episode will make you question what you’ve accepted as truth. This isn’t hate. It’s honesty. This isn’t rebellion. It’s awareness. So watch till the end — because sometimes, breaking the illusion is the only real awakening. acharya prashant, acharya prashant exposed, acharya prashant philosophy, acharya prashant illusion, acharya prashant veganism, osho vs acharya prashant, purpose of life, acharya prashant happiness, buddha suffering, osho happiness, osho philosophy, meaning of life, spiritual awakening, gautam buddha teachings, gautam buddha quotes, purpose of life in hinduism, indian philosophy podcast, spirituality in india, ego death, enlightenment, illusion of self, detachment and desire, how to find happiness, spiritual truth, mindfulness, modern spirituality, sadhguru vs acharya prashant, indian podcast, candid exchange, life purpose explained, awakening, truth seekers india, consciousness, awareness, overthinking, mind vs heart, freedom from suffering.