Acharya Prashant addresses the question of how to find the right action when the mind is divided and presenting conflicting choices. He explains that the right action has no voice. While he may have previously described the voice of the heart as faint, he clarifies that it is even more faint than faint; it has no voice at all. Whenever there is a voice, it is the voice of the mind. The right action happens voicelessly, coming from nowhere and going into nowhere, to the point that you don't even know you have acted. If someone were to tell you that you just made a choice, you would be surprised and question if a choice was even there. When the mind is divided into parts, with each part pulling in a different direction, none of these directions is your true direction. They are simply the directions of those particular parts of the mind. If one of these forces becomes strong enough to overpower the others and drag you along, it does not mean that this dominant force is you, or that its direction is your freedom. Similarly, a weak or faint force is not necessarily the voice of the heart just because it is faint. None of the divisions of the mind, whether large or small, represent the essence of the mind. When faced with such a dilemma, it is not imperative to act. You have the freedom to not go in either direction and to just stay put. The advice is to let the conflicting forces, the 'pullers', tire themselves out and become exhausted. When their power wanes, the right movement will happen spontaneously on its own, without you needing to decide or choose. This entire internal conflict is described as a circus, and any outcome from it is a joke. One should not become a character in this drama but instead let the forces play out until the right action emerges naturally.