Acharya Prashant addresses the problem of being unable to act on what one knows is right, such as waking up early. He explains that this is not a matter of training but of love. Our entire system, including education and upbringing, stifles all spontaneity, making us afraid of it. We are conditioned to seek education even in matters of love. If you truly know something is right, you just do it without needing to be trained. The claim to know something is right but being unable to act on it suggests that the knowledge is not yet complete or real. To truly know something, one must become intimate with it, which is what love is. When love for something is present, it allows one to bulldoze opposing habits and tendencies. Using the example of waking up for a beautiful sunrise, he suggests that if habits prevent sleeping on time, the love for the sunrise should be so strong that one is willing to forgo sleep entirely. This commitment demonstrates the power of love over habit. He posits a law that real knowledge and real action are concurrent. When one truly knows, the ego, or the choosing agency, surrenders, leaving one optionless and helpless to act. If you find yourself repeatedly distracted from a goal, you must question whether the goal is truly worth it. It might be that you are pursuing it due to social pressure, ignorance, or fear, which is why your inner power is not engaged. The Self, with its boundless energy, is only moved by true love or crystal-clear knowing. When this happens, the power is awesome, and trivial matters like sleeping, eating, or maintaining a certain personality disappear. The only thing that remains is the important thing, to which you commit yourself totally. Acharya Prashant's advice is to get closer to the thing you claim to know, as there is still a distance to be bridged. You must keep knowing until your knowledge becomes loving action. Seek clarity to the maximum extent possible, because clarity will become your driver, eliminating the need for motivation or pushing yourself.