Acharya Prashant addresses the fear of awakening, noting that it is natural to be afraid when spiritual people present a distorted and unattractive picture of enlightenment. He critiques the stereotypical image of enlightened beings as zombies who use limited vocabulary, wear specific colors, and lack human warmth or the ability to interact on an equal level. He clarifies that awakening is actually very simple and ordinary, yet people miss it because they have been conditioned to believe it is a special, godly state reserved for a few. He emphasizes that enlightenment is one's true nature and is present in the simple moment of being, rather than in reaching for something distant or extraordinary. He further explains that the desire for enlightenment is a hindrance, as desire only strengthens the ego and the sense of being a 'desirous one.' He encourages the listener to investigate why they feel something is wrong with them or why they feel incomplete in the first place. Acharya Prashant asserts that the moment the search for enlightenment, a heavenly future, or ambition is dropped, that very state is enlightenment. He points out that society, through education, family, and media, constantly magnifies a sense of dissatisfaction and incompleteness in individuals, pushing them to 'become' something. While a child's dissatisfaction is purely physical, social conditioning builds upon this to create a psychological sense of lack that fuels the unnecessary search for spiritual achievement.