Acharya Prashant addresses the misconception that spiritual realization depends on specific personal experiences. He argues that if truth were dependent on the unique experiences of saints like Kabir Saheb or Ashtavakra, it would be inaccessible to others due to differences in time, location, gender, and circumstances. He warns against using the 'uniqueness' of saints as an excuse for inaction or spiritual laziness. The realization of truth is not a matter of external conditions but is one's own inherent nature, accessible to everyone just as it was to the saints. He clarifies that when spiritual teachers speak of 'experience,' they often refer to a state where the ego is absent, rather than a personal gain for the individual. Furthermore, Acharya Prashant explains that understanding cannot be carried forward from one moment to the next as a memory or a fixed principle. True understanding must be fresh and immediate; if it is stored in memory, it becomes a mere concept or image, devoid of truth. He highlights how the modern education system has conditioned people to equate learning with memorization, which creates a burden that prevents one from truly immersing themselves in the present. He concludes by stating that the mind and body naturally remember what is essential for survival, and anything that requires forced effort to remember is likely not worth holding onto.