Acharya Prashant explains that from childhood, human beings are conditioned to live through definitions and mental frameworks. These definitions, whether regarding love, freedom, or silence, are like blueprints of a house—one can look at them, but one cannot live in them. He clarifies that his role is not to provide new definitions or knowledge, as the mind is already cluttered with borrowed ideas from family, school, and media. Instead, he speaks about topics like liberation and truth only because the listener already holds false concepts about them. His words are intended to act as a cleansing process, attacking and removing old, poisonous beliefs rather than establishing new ones. He emphasizes that if a person were already established in silence and their true nature, there would be no need for conversation. He further discusses how most people are not truly 'born' in a spiritual sense; they are merely a collection of imported thoughts and social conditioning, leading lives that are predictable and identical to millions of others. This attachment to the past and to false identities acts as a burden that prevents the expression of one's true, inner nature. Acharya Prashant uses the metaphor of fire to describe his teachings: his words are like fire that burns the 'fuel' of the listener's ego and accumulated garbage. If there is no fuel (ego) left, the fire causes no pain. He urges the listener to embrace 'voluntary death'—the total dropping of the false self—rather than trying to pay small, partial prices for liberation. True freedom comes not from gradual effort, but from the radical realization that one is not the person they have believed themselves to be.