Acharya Prashant explains that the stability of the life we commonly refer to is akin to the stability of a corpse, which is very still. A person who moves throughout their life becomes stable only when placed in a grave. However, even there, stability is not guaranteed, as earthquakes can unearth corpses. In the life we know, nothing is truly stable; everything is in constant motion. Even things that appear stationary are not. For instance, while we may seem still to each other, we are actually moving at thousands of kilometers per second. Therefore, in this life, there is no stability, and it cannot exist. True stability can only be found at the point that witnesses all the instabilities coming and going. Imagine standing firmly in the middle of a powerful storm where everything is moving. What is stable in that scenario? The swaying trees are not stable, the blowing wind is not stable, and even your clothes and body are not stable. A strong gust of wind can make you sway. Yet, there is something that remains stable: the one who is watching. That is the only thing that can be stable. Everything else will remain unstable. No matter how much you try to make external things permanent, you will only find sorrow. People foolishly try to find stability by building big houses, getting married, or accumulating wealth, but no one has ever achieved true stability this way. One must go to the source of real stability. Externally, there will always be storms. In the midst of these storms, the body cannot be stable, and neither can the thoughts that arise. However, something within can remain stable. To find it, one must pay attention and watch everything that is in motion. A strange realization will occur: you will not only see the movement but also become aware of something within you that is not moving, something that the storm cannot touch. This realization brings great joy and removes all fear. Then, you can face any storm, knowing that it is not in your nature to be moved. It is foolish to pray for the external storm to become stable; if one subsides, another will arise. Stability is not to be found outside, but somewhere else entirely.