Acharya Prashant explains that human beings are already and actually dependent only on the Lord, but the ego mistakenly imagines independence or dependence on other things. He clarifies that total dependence on God is the reality, yet the ego resists this surrender because it wants to retain the option of godlessness and the right to choose against the Truth. Spiritual practice, therefore, involves giving up the right to disagree with God and falling in line with the Truth, which brings simplicity and dissolves complications. Addressing the concept of attachment to the Word or the Name of God, he describes it as the highest direction for one's internal tendencies. While the Word, the Guru, and the Scriptures are physical entities, they are worthy of love and respect because their fruit is metaphysical, leading one beyond physicality. He concludes that spiritual sublimation does not mean the end of tendencies, but rather their complete redirection toward the Truth, where attachment is no longer worldly but focused on the One.