Acharya Prashant explains that Shri Krishna represents the ultimate truth, but for humans, this truth is often reduced to a mere theory rather than a lived reality. He highlights the apparent contradictions in Shri Krishna's life—lifting a mountain yet being bound by His mother, killing Kansa yet playing with Gopis, and delivering the profound wisdom of the Bhagavad Gita while weeping like an ordinary lover during His departure from Mathura. These are not contradictions but a representation of completeness where the absolute truth (Shri Krishna) and the worldly expression (Radha) coexist. He emphasizes that one cannot know Shri Krishna without Radha, just as one cannot reach the truth without engaging deeply with the world of thoughts and emotions. Spirituality is not about becoming dry or renouncing the world; it is about living with such depth that one is present in both joy and sorrow. Acharya Prashant critiques the common tendency to divide life into spiritual and worldly compartments. He argues that many people avoid the truth out of fear of losing their worldly attachments, yet they never truly 'possess' the world to begin with. Shri Krishna is unique because He is both extraordinary and ordinary, a warrior and a lover, a rock and flowing water. He lives entirely in the present moment, unburdened by past precedents or future anxieties. True spirituality, or 'Krishnatva', is the courage to live without pre-planned conclusions or social conditioning. It is a state of total freedom where one acts according to the immediate requirement of the moment, whether that means seeking peace or engaging in a righteous war. Ultimately, Shri Krishna serves as an invitation to abandon slavery to social and mental burdens and to live with total authenticity.