Acharya Prashant addresses a question regarding the state of supreme bliss and whether one can fall away from it once attained. He challenges the common tendency to create mental images or definitions of supreme bliss, questioning why people claim ignorance of it while their entire existence—every breath, every meal, and every desire for the future—is driven by a deep-seated urge to find something that is currently missing. He explains that while one may not know supreme bliss through thought or consciousness, it is known at the level of the soul. He emphasizes that the obstacle is not a lack of knowledge, but rather excessive cleverness and the constant attempt to intellectually grasp the truth. Using the metaphor of an ice cube in a glass of wine, Acharya Prashant explains that to experience the 'intoxication' of the truth, one must melt and merge with it rather than remaining a separate, solid entity. He asserts that truth is immeasurable and cannot be proven or guaranteed through words or evidence. In this spiritual path, the seeker must become the very thing they desire; the lover and the beloved become one. He concludes that true love is when it turns into worship, and this requires the total surrender of the calculating mind. To bow one's head truly means to discard the 'calculators' of profit and loss and to exist in a state that is beyond purpose or worldly meaning.