Acharya Prashant explains that spirituality does not dictate the occurrence or non-occurrence of specific external events, as life is beautifully unpredictable. Instead, it addresses the state of the experiencer. While experiences are often perceived as objective, they are actually internal feelings like hesitation, despair, or even happiness and excitement. The presence of an experiencer who is affected by these dualities—such as pain and pleasure—is an indication of suffering and a lack of inner settlement. True observation, or witnessing, involves the observing faculty looking at itself rather than merely watching external events. He clarifies that freedom from experience is not the same as becoming impervious or detached in a hollow, ascetic way. Most people do not truly experience life because they are either too afraid or too attached to dive deep into the truth of things. They live in a state of being 'permanently anesthetized,' unable to even stop their daily momentum to act on compassionate urges. Real freedom from experience means being free in the middle of experience. It is the empowerment to dive deeply into life's events because one knows that no experience can truly add to or reduce their essential self. Acharya Prashant emphasizes that only when something no longer 'matters' in a binding sense can a person truly jump into life with a carefree attitude. Chasing or avoiding experiences both indicate that the experience still holds too much power over the individual. The spiritual quality he describes is one that welcomes experience without being dependent on it. In this state, whether a particular event happens or not, the individual remains in a state of celebration and inner stability.