Acharya Prashant addresses the questioner's tendency to be a restless and anxious overachiever, which she uses to avoid inner suffering. He explains that the belief that observing this suffering will bring more suffering is a convenient story or fiction. The suffering is not in the observation but is inherent in the desperate and blind movement itself. This blind movement wants to continue, so it has woven a story that observing it will be painful, thereby preventing the observation. Acharya Prashant shares a tweet he made: "Before, what is fun? Maya (illusion). After, what is Maya? Fun." He elaborates that when you can observe the play of Maya within yourself, it is not painful but a lot of fun. It's like catching your own inner thief red-handed, and there is a great pleasure in that. He encourages the questioner to see how she deceives herself and, in the moment of deception, to catch herself. This, he says, is fun. He advises that if you keep believing that self-observation will bring suffering, the story will prevent you from seeing anything. The story itself comes from a refusal to see. He suggests that the more you can observe what is happening within you in an uninvolved, detached way, the more you will find that therapy works better for you. As you see the inner "disease" or "wound" for what it is—a collection of trivialities and pettiness—it will shrink, and you may eventually no longer need therapy. The ability to laugh recklessly at oneself is a mark of freedom and intelligence. The wound is a lie; the only thing that truly is, is the Truth.