Acharya Prashant explains that 'home' is not a physical destination but a state of being where one truly resides. He clarifies that while we are always at home, we often sleep and dream that we are far away, even planning journeys to go further into the distance. This 'home' is the self, and it is impossible to be anywhere else; the perceived distance is merely a lack of awareness. He notes that the perception of 'many' people or things is a characteristic of a dream, as multiplicity does not exist outside of it. Within this dream, certain figures or voices call out to the individual to wake up. These voices are not separate entities but manifestations of the source, representing a deep intimacy with one's own origin. He further elaborates that these calling voices are essentially the individual's own true self communicating within the dream. Using the example of Kahlil Gibran's 'The Prophet', he suggests that the characters calling the protagonist home are Gibran himself, as the real self knows far more than the dreaming self. Addressing the paradox of how illusion can exist if only truth is real, Acharya Prashant asserts that ignorance is actually a part of truth. He explains that truth is so absolutely free that it possesses the freedom even to be ignorant or to sleep. Thus, the ability to dream and the ability to wake up are both expressions of an absolute existential freedom.