Acharya Prashant explains that dharma is singular and cannot be plural; its only true purpose is to attain liberation, peace, and freedom from inner falseness and bondages. He clarifies that what people commonly refer to as 'truth realization' is actually the process of dropping falseness. Most individuals burden themselves with thousands of duties and responsibilities, labeling them as dharma, but these are often just forms of common conditioning and indoctrination from upbringing and society. The speaker emphasizes that there is only one real dharma, which is freedom, and everything else is merely bondage masquerading as duty. He references the Bhagavad Gita and the Upanishads to highlight that even supreme scriptures command the dropping of these false religions and responsibilities to reach the ultimate truth. Acharya Prashant asserts that religiosity is not about rituals, traditions, or pilgrimages, which are merely peripheral, but about moving with determination toward truth and peace. He explains that a sannyasi is one who has dropped all worldly dharmas to focus on the non-negotiable goal of liberation. He interprets Shri Krishna's instruction to 'drop all dharmas' as a call to abandon false identities and roles—such as being a son, a husband, or a scholar—which create petty and incarcerating responsibilities. These roles are based on a false definition of the self. By answering the question 'Who am I?' correctly, one can be relieved of these suffocating identities. Ultimately, the speaker concludes that dropping false responsibilities allows one to accept the only real responsibility: returning to the source of truth, or Brahman.