Acharya Prashant addresses a questioner who feels unworthy of serving the truth due to underlying ego tendencies and a desire for respect. He explains that one should serve the truth precisely because they feel unworthy, as committing to the right thing is the only way to become worthy. He defines value as the elevation of consciousness, which can only be achieved through the pursuit of truth. He clarifies that chasing the truth does not mean a treasure hunt but rather the identification and negation of the false, following the Vedantic principle of neti-neti. Falseness, he explains, is not in the objects themselves but in the perceiver's distorted vision driven by desire. Acharya Prashant emphasizes that dropping the false is not about physically discarding people or objects, but about dropping the internal 'dropper'—the one who assigns false meanings and imaginary qualities to things. He points out that humans often create mental castles and project their desires onto others, leading to dishonesty and eventual suffering when these illusions collapse. He advises that one should neither be attached to nor despise anything, as both attachment and aversion are based on incorrect perceptions. By seeing things and people for what they truly are, without the interference of personal desires, one reaches a right state of living characterized by the absence of both attachment and hatred.