Acharya Prashant explains that truth is fundamentally an emptiness or nothingness that seeks expression according to the situation. Because the world is in a constant state of flux, the expression of truth must necessarily change and can never be identical from one moment to the next. He notes that truth is a non-conformist and a rebel, meaning it does not follow its own previous statements and can even appear to contradict itself. Unlike facts, which are finite fragments observable through the senses and have clear opposites, truth contains its own opposite because nothing lies outside of it. He further clarifies that there is no single statement that can be called 'the truth'; rather, there are only statements arising from the truth. When one is seated in inner peace and innocence, any statement or action that emerges—no matter how nonsensical or simple—is an expression of truth. The validity of a statement depends entirely on the center from which it originates. Acharya Prashant advises that one should not worry about 'deciding' what truth is, as truth is not a person's business. Instead, one should limit themselves to looking at the facts of their life honestly and ruthlessly. By living purely in facts and avoiding imagination, the truth will naturally take care of the individual.