Acharya Prashant explains that gratitude should not be objective or dependent on specific reasons or events. He suggests that a general sense of gratitude, which he equates with attention, is a state of being where one feels that everything is 'all right' regardless of external circumstances. This sense of well-being should persist in the middle of both deep chaos and deep pleasure, as it represents a mind that is not swayed by the specialness of any particular situation. He emphasizes that the mind's most legitimate function is to live in a constant state of thanks, which makes an individual unstoppable in their actions. He further clarifies that this foundational sense of 'it's all right' does not imply passivity or the tolerance of injustice. One can be energetically cleaning dirt, fighting against deception, or protecting one's interests while remaining firmly rooted in this primary ground of gratitude. Even when facing great injustice, the essential realization that everything is fundamentally all right remains. This state of being is described as the primary life force that exists beyond words, leading to a sense of already being home where even the need for focused attention disappears.