Acharya Prashant explains that the journey of spirituality begins only for those who feel a genuine and deep inner necessity. He clarifies that spirituality is not a path for everyone; it is specifically for individuals who experience a profound restlessness or emptiness that cannot be resolved through worldly means. While surface-level problems like financial needs, social status, or physical comforts have worldly solutions, spiritual inquiry arises when one realizes that these external achievements do not fill the inner void. He emphasizes that if a person's suffering is merely due to the lack of material objects, they should seek those objects rather than turning to spiritual texts. He further distinguishes between worldly disappointment and true renunciation. Often, people turn away from one worldly object only to seek another, which he describes as merely changing directions on the same horizontal plane. True spirituality involves a change in dimension, comparable to rising into the sky rather than just moving across the ground. It is for those who have moved beyond both hope and disappointment regarding the world, as both states keep a person tied to material existence. Spirituality begins when one starts receiving an invitation from a higher realm and stops being consumed by the trivialities of the world. Finally, Acharya Prashant addresses the fear that spirituality requires abandoning the world. He explains that while the spiritual person's heart belongs to the infinite, their body remains part of the earth. Instead of discarding earthly life, the spiritual individual brings a vastness and light to their conduct and relationships. By establishing themselves in a higher dimension, they do not lose the world but rather become a source of illumination for it, transforming their earthly existence with the clarity and expansiveness of the sky.