Acharya Prashant explains that restlessness stems from being stuck at the level of material objects and suggests experimenting with one's perceptions to shift this state. He advises individuals to distance themselves from what they consider highly valuable and to approach what they find frightening. This practice reveals that the actual gain from desired objects and the actual loss from feared situations are much less significant than imagined. By realizing that things are neither as attractive nor as terrifying as they seem, their importance diminishes, and the mind is freed from constant preoccupation. He further distinguishes between the worldly person, the seeker, and the one in Samadhi. A worldly person sees a vast diversity of separate things, while a seeker sees only the duality of Truth and untruth. The one who has attained Samadhi sees only the one Truth, which results in a state where specific worldly distinctions disappear into a profound emptiness. This seeing nothing is described as the true vision. Consequently, life becomes light and simple, as the need for constant analysis, complex choices, and calculations vanishes, allowing for a life lived with ease and without fear.