Acharya Prashant emphasizes that once a person prioritizes peace as their utmost goal, the choice is already made and the path becomes clear. He observes that people rarely make this choice in their daily lives, such as at weddings or markets, yet they narrate stories as if they are always choosing truth. He explains that true understanding is not academic, intellectual, or analytical; rather, it is an intimate resolution of the heart. Knowledge, he argues, often acts as a barrier to intimacy, functioning like a guest room that prevents a visitor from entering the deeper interiors of one's being. He asserts that academic understanding is merely a reconfiguration of words and language gimmicks that fail to touch the essence of reality. Using the example of his pet rabbit, Golu, Acharya Prashant illustrates that understanding is evidenced by peace and relaxation rather than intellectual comprehension. While humans often remain tense and knotted by trying to make sense of words, the rabbit is at peace simply by being in the presence of the master. He shares an anecdote about foreign listeners who were moved to tears and laughter by his Hindi discourse despite not knowing the language, proving that true communication transcends words and idioms. He critiques the modern obsession with collecting quotes and posting them on social media, calling it a superficial display that misses the silent, wordless essence of spirituality. Acharya Prashant concludes by stating that there is no separate 'spiritual world'; there is only the material world, and spirituality is not about gathering more knowledge. He advises against coming to him with a specific purpose or trying to act knowledgeable and studious. He suggests that it is better to be 'dumbfounded' and silent than to engage in the 'tamasha' of intellectual analysis. True understanding is like love—it is total, not partial, and it results in the disappearance of the problem or question itself.