Acharya Prashant responds to a questioner who asks how to find God after having tried various meditation techniques and being guided first to Osho and then to the speaker. Acharya Prashant begins by deconstructing the questioner's notion of God as an external entity that gives instructions. He rhetorically asks how God communicated these directions, questioning whether it was through a letter, email, or a personal visit, thereby highlighting that God is not a person who interacts in conventional ways. He explains that God is the power within oneself that provides good inspiration (satprerna). God is not a person who will stand before you or speak in any language. Using the metaphor of a distant light in a dark world, he illustrates that to reach this light, one must use the light itself to illuminate the path. This means one must constantly keep their attention on the light to navigate the obstacles. Therefore, God is both the destination (lakshya) and the guide (path-pradarshak). God is the goal and also the companion who leads you to it, provided you do not turn your back on Him. Acharya Prashant asserts that believing in an external God is futile because such an entity does not exist. God is the center of your own mind, the truth of your own intentions. The very power you seek is the same power that enables you to seek it. He clarifies that within every individual, there is both truth (God) and falsehood (Maya), and one has the freedom to choose between them. The way to find God is by consistently choosing God in every decision of life. Making choices based on love, truth, compassion, and selflessness is choosing God. Conversely, making decisions out of greed, fear, delusion, and unconsciousness is choosing Maya. Thus, the question should be reframed from 'How will God find me?' to 'How will I find God?' because God is already present within. The spiritual journey is about continuously making the right choices, climbing the stairs one by one, just as the questioner has been doing, to ultimately reach the final destination.