Acharya Prashant explains Bulleh Shah's concept of the 'first home' as the original source or the state of being before division, separation, and time. This is the same home that Kabir Saheb refers to as our true abode. We are currently exiled from this home because we have created numerous other 'homes'—places where we falsely claim to find rest and belonging. As long as we consider these temporary shelters as our true home, we remain in a state of conflict and cannot achieve a state of being without enmity. The speaker emphasizes that we do not see the Divine because we have been cast out of that original home due to our own shamelessness in seeking comfort in worldly attachments. Addressing the phrase 'the times have turned upside down,' Acharya Prashant clarifies that this refers to a fundamental lack of spirituality rather than just social or communal issues. All human problems arise because the entire world is moving in the opposite direction of where it should be going. Instead of addressing the root cause—the narrowness and ego of the human mind—people seek partial or superficial solutions. Society focuses on conflict management rather than conflict eradication, merely suppressing tensions to make them tolerable rather than resolving the underlying darkness and ignorance. He further illustrates that people avoid direct and simple truths because facing them would require personal transformation and the collapse of their current ego-driven systems. For instance, instead of questioning the nature of worship or the obsession with land and nationality, people delay problems or find economic distractions. This 'upside-down' world is characterized by people willing to endure immense suffering and complex difficulties just to avoid taking the one direct, simple step toward the truth. True peace can only be achieved by addressing the internal state of the human mind.