Acharya Prashant explains that being skilled in action and choosing the right action are inseparable. A meditative person's actions are correct because they prioritize the selection of the right task above all else. He refutes the popular spiritual marketing claim that spirituality helps one excel in 'whatever' they do. He asserts that a spiritual person does not engage in 'whatever' random or ego-driven activities; instead, spirituality eliminates randomness and dictates that one must only perform what is appropriate and right. If the ego uses meditation as a tool to increase productivity in a wrong livelihood, it is not true meditation. True meditation is the master that decides whether one should even engage in a particular business or task in the first place. He further criticizes the idea of 'blossoming where you are,' arguing that if one is planted in the wrong environment, like a flower in sand, spirituality demands the courage to uproot oneself and move to the right place rather than trying to sustain a wrong situation. He dismisses the notion that 'everything happens for a reason' as a falsehood, describing the world as fragmented and lacking inherent integrity. He emphasizes that true integrity or 'wholeness' is rare and belongs only to the Truth. Finally, he advises that spiritual texts and concepts should be reflected in one's own life rather than being used for intellectual correlations or academic comparisons. The goal is not to find similarities between scriptures, but to end one's own illusions and suffering.