Acharya Prashant explains that Arjun's miserable position is the situation of entire mankind and a conflict we all face daily. He states that Krishna and Arjun are both within us, and Krishna is the heart of Arjun. Using a story about a lion scared of his own reflection, he describes the world as a phenomenal place where things happen on the surface, while beneath all phenomenon lies the noumenon, which never happens. He defines evil not as being afraid of echoes and images, but as being so wedded to fear and determined not to change that one would rather eliminate the teacher. He asserts that teachers and missionaries are penultimate representatives and mirrors whose glory is merely reflected from the truth. He describes anything with a name, shape, or form as a bubble in time that is not worthy of hardcore insistence. He suggests having a sweet contempt toward the world, as it only deserves love if it carries the fragrance of the beyond. He concludes that nothing in the world should become a fixation because that which is worthy of unconditional reverence cannot be thought of or pointed at.