Acharya Prashant explains that people often mistakenly believe that experiences are located in the distance or the future, leading them to seek out special events like bungee jumping or traveling to far-off places. He clarifies that everything happening in the present moment is an experience, including the mind's judgment that labels one situation as an experience and another as a non-experience. To truly experience something is to become one with it and to observe the mind's search for the elusive. Being open to experience means being open to the present moment rather than running toward extraordinary thrills. He further discusses how conditioning and fears are active right now, rather than being events that will occur at a later time. He uses the analogy of breathing through two nostrils to represent the two dimensions of human existence: duality and non-duality. If a person lives only in one dimension, they feel suffocated and make desperate attempts to find excitement. He emphasizes that one must live in this world while maintaining a constant remembrance of what this world is. This remembrance brings a sense of the beyond without needing to escape the current reality. Ultimately, everything is happening on its own, and one simply needs to know that it is happening.