Acharya Prashant discusses the nature of realization and conditioning, referencing the works of Ramana Maharishi. He emphasizes that the greatest proof of understanding is not in matching one's life against a teacher's words, but in being what the teacher pointed toward. He clarifies that even enlightened beings like Shri Krishna or Ramana Maharishi possess conditioning, such as language or genetic features, but they do not grant it central importance. The goal is not to emulate the person but to disappear as they did. He notes that while truth and grace are available to everyone, most people refuse to believe or accept them due to a lack of faith. Regarding meditation and the process of spiritual 'burning' or cessation, Acharya Prashant explains that these are not progressive or continuous events in time. He asserts that spirituality is about cessation rather than continuation. He describes spiritual transformation as a series of discrete, spontaneous activities caused by grace rather than a causal sequence. Even if something burns over several hours, what happens at one moment is not caused by the previous moment. Because each moment is caused by grace and not by the preceding event, the process is uncaused and the moments are not interlinked in a temporal sequence.