Acharya Prashant explains the profound meaning behind the verses of Baba Bulleh Shah and Kabir Saheb, focusing on the concept of 'blindness' as a metaphor for transcending sensory perception. He clarifies that when Bulleh Shah speaks of going to a place where everyone is blind, he is referring to a state where worldly identities—such as caste, gender, nationality, and ideology—which are perceived through the senses, lose their significance. This 'blindness' is not a lack of sight but the opening of the 'third eye,' or spiritual consciousness, which looks beyond the material and dualistic nature of the world. Kabir Saheb similarly describes the heart as a dark place, signifying that the senses and the intellect cannot reach the ultimate truth residing within. The speaker highlights that human perception is often flawed because it relies on the senses and memory, which are tools of the ego. Memory selectively retains information that supports one's self-image, leading to a distorted understanding of reality. Acharya Prashant points out that while the common person believes they see clearly, they are often 'blind' because they repeatedly fall into the same traps of suffering and ignorance. He contrasts the mechanical accuracy of a recorder and the absolute consciousness of a saint like Bulleh Shah with the confused, semi-conscious state of the average human. To reach the truth, one must either transcend the ego entirely or recognize the unreliability of sensory data. Finally, the discussion touches upon the nature of choice and destiny. Acharya Prashant explains that humans exist in a middle state—neither fully asleep nor fully awake. In this state, the choice remains to either fall back into complete ignorance or to strive for total consciousness. He concludes that the ultimate goal is to reach a state of 'choicelessness' or 'nirvikalpa,' where there is no longer a conflict between options because one is firmly established in the singular truth. True sight is not about what the physical eyes see, but about recognizing the unchanging reality behind the constantly shifting world of forms.