Acharya Prashant addresses the feeling of being limited by the world, explaining that while others may be limited, one should not allow those limitations to become their own. He uses a story about a village where everyone becomes insane after drinking poisoned water from a common well. The only sane man left faces immense social pressure and disrespect from the mad majority, leading him to almost drink the water himself to fit in. However, witnessing the beauty of the sunrise and the freedom of birds reminds him that existence is vast and unconstrained. He realizes he is not bound to a mad society and chooses to leave the village to retain his sanity. Acharya Prashant emphasizes that life and existence are always ready to help, but one must be prepared to receive that help. He asserts that the world one experiences is a reflection of their own state of being; a terrorist lives in a world of terrorists, while a monk lives in a world of monks. He concludes that all limitations are self-created and imaginary. By changing one's self-concept and recognizing inherent freedom, an individual can choose to live in a world of free beings rather than remaining trapped in a limited or insane society.