Acharya Prashant highlights the unique and authentic nature of Kabir Saheb, describing him as a saint who belonged to no specific tradition and unabashedly challenged both Hindu and Muslim orthodoxies. Born into a Hindu family but raised by a Muslim couple in Varanasi, Kabir Saheb lived a simple life as a weaver while dismissing religious bigotries, dogmas, and superstitions. His genius lay in his courage to speak the truth, even when faced with malicious propaganda. Acharya Prashant explains that Kabir Saheb's decision to die in Maghar, a place traditionally considered inauspicious, was a final joke on the belief that physical locations like Varanasi or the Ganga could grant salvation. He emphasizes that if external factors could provide liberation, then devotion to truth would have no role. Acharya Prashant further explains that truth is not a destination reached through predetermined actions, planning, or intellectual effort. Instead, truth is the beginning and the very foundation of right action. He asserts that any movement or journey 'towards' the truth actually takes one away from it, as truth is found in the cessation of movement and in stillness. Surrender is described as the clear realization of the mind's impotence and the dropping of egocentric efforts. The speaker warns that the ego uses imagination to block movement toward the truth by creating fears about the future. Ultimately, he defines gratitude not as a verbal expression or a prayer, but as a state of contentment where one no longer desires more, living with the realization that everything is already 'all right.'