Acharya Prashant explains that people often ask where the Truth is, and the answer is that it is everywhere, all the time. However, it constantly makes one uncomfortable. The ego desires all comforts, but the Truth keeps you uncomfortable in the middle of all your comforts. While it is said that Truth is peace and relaxation, this is only true for the truthful one. It is crucial to always ask the fundamental question: for whom? Truth is great, but only for the truthful one. For the untruthful, Truth is something to be utterly avoided. It is like a bull in a china shop, a miscreant, or an antisocial fringe element. It is like a street dog that barks at exactly the wrong times. For instance, when one is proposing love, the barking of Truth interrupts, revealing the beastly nature behind the declaration. The moment you say "I," before you can say "love," Truth barks, exposing that it is a dog proposing to a bitch. Similarly, during deeply religious moments, Truth's barking desecrates the holy atmosphere. It is the audacious, offensive, and bold element that enters places of worship, and everything is desecrated. Acharya Prashant further illustrates this with the metaphor of a professor lecturing on atheism, whose discourse is intercepted by the sound of temple bells. The professor, whose ears won't hear the bell, is missing exactly what he needs to hear. This is the nature of Truth. We filter it out. When we clean a surface and fresh specks of dust land on it, we refuse to see them because we have invested so much effort in cleaning. This is how we become dishonest. We want cleanliness, but when we see we cannot have it with our efforts, we tell ourselves there is no uncleanliness, even when we have spotted the dust. This reflects the human condition: we are always chasing the Absolute in everything we do, whether it's wanting absolute cleanliness, an absolute fit for our clothes, or absolute satisfaction in a relationship. The quest for the Absolute is the essence of all religiosity and spirituality. However, those who proudly declare themselves atheists are really saying they do not know themselves, because to know oneself is to know the thirst for the Absolute. The paradox is that while we search for Truth, the moment it comes to us, the ego blocks it away. The ego finds Truth's embrace to be like suffocation. The entire spiritual process is not about attainment but about not doing what you have been continuously doing. You don't have to search for the Truth; you just have to stop blocking it. Truth is not static; it chases you. When it chases you, you block it. Truth is a gentle giant that respects your wish and won't embrace you without your consent. Unfortunately, our wish is almost always loaded against the Truth.