Acharya Prashant explains that our conventional definitions of right and wrong both originate from the same mental center. Moving from what appears wrong to what appears right is a superficial change that often blocks real transformation. This movement is predictable and pre-planned by the unchanged ego, which seeks to maintain its own continuity. Real change, however, is not a conscious or planned effort; it is unpredictable, uninformed, and often happens behind one's back. It does not conform to personal goals or patterns and may even leave one feeling ashamed or bewildered because it defeats the ego's decisions. He emphasizes that real change is synonymous with silence and surrender. While the ego finds silence injurious and attempts to disrupt it through restlessness or random thoughts, true transformation occurs when one is still and non-active. Using the analogy of a surgeon and a patient under anesthesia, he explains that grace can only operate in one's absence. Any activity, whether resisting change or trying to 'help' grace, only serves to block it. Ultimately, real change is not about evolution or marching forward, but about the dissolution of the entity that feels the need to change.