Acharya Prashant explains that communion is a higher state than communication, where the sender, the message, and the receiver become one without the need for tools. He critiques the fragmentation of the modern professional who merely plays a part, noting that such manipulation does not lead to genuine success. He asserts that observation is fundamentally different from interpretation, which is just a form of material thought. By demonstrating how easily a simple command can occupy the mind, he illustrates that most people are socially conditioned slaves rather than individuals. He points out that even intimate desires and attractions are often implanted by external factors and past conditioning. Acharya Prashant emphasizes that one's perceived nature is often just accumulated social rubbish, and real nature can only emerge when this is realized. He describes true openness as a state that naturally resists conditioning, comparing a still mind to a lake that reflects reality as it is. He concludes by stating that observation is superior to the duality of acceptance and rejection, as the latter stems from a background of conflict.