Acharya Prashant explains that spirituality is not about achieving a state of constant happiness or pleasure, but rather about understanding the nature of both happiness and sorrow. He clarifies that the common pursuit of 'spiritual happiness' is often just another form of entertainment or intoxication. True spirituality, or being in a state of 'Anand' (bliss), is distinct from the dualities of pleasure and pain. While pleasure and pain are mental states that depend on each other, bliss is the underlying state of being that remains untouched by these fluctuations. It is a state of non-resistance where one is neither overwhelmed by joy nor broken by grief. The speaker emphasizes that one does not need to 'become' a seeker or reach a specific state like the character Hasan, because everyone is already living in a state of incompleteness, constantly knocking on doors for fulfillment. He asserts that the problem is not the situation itself, but the belief that one is 'problematic' or incomplete. Diagnosis, or seeing the unreality of one's perceived flaws, is the key rather than seeking a cure. He warns against bringing scriptures down to one's own level of understanding; instead, one should approach them with humility to rise to their level. Ultimately, spirituality is described as the awareness or 'Hosh' that remains unaffected and 'un-moistened' even when tears are flowing, representing a depth that external circumstances cannot reach.