Acharya Prashant addresses the feeling of worthlessness that arises when one notices ego-driven motives behind seemingly good actions, such as promoting veganism to gain parental respect. He explains that one should serve the truth precisely because they feel unworthy, as committing to the right thing is the only way to become worthy. Value is defined as that which raises consciousness, and only the pursuit of truth can achieve this elevation. Therefore, if one feels they are at a lowly point, chasing the truth becomes even more essential. Chasing the truth is not a treasure hunt but a process of identifying and dropping the false through negation. Acharya Prashant defines falseness as that which is not what it appears to be. He clarifies that falseness does not reside in external objects or people, but in the perceiver whose desires distort reality. We often project our own meanings and fantasies onto others, such as imagining a neighbor to be a divine fairy. When these illusions collapse, we wrongly blame the objects rather than our own skewed vision. Dropping the false does not mean physically abandoning people or possessions; it means dropping the internal 'dropper' and the false perceptions assigned to things. Acharya Prashant emphasizes that objects and people are just what they are, independent of the meanings we project onto them. By inquiring and seeing things as they truly are, both attachment and hatred disappear. When one stops projecting desires, they reach a right state of living where they can neither be attached to nor despise anything, leading to a state that can be called love.