Acharya Prashant explains a verse from Shabad Hazare, emphasizing that one must accept whatever God does as good while ceasing personal cleverness and will. He clarifies that while it is impossible to directly identify if a thought or action originates from God, one can certainly identify the source of their own thoughts and actions. Since most human actions arise from multiple false identities, inconsistencies, and weaknesses rather than the truth, the spiritual path involves detecting and shunning these rotten origins. He notes that when something truly happens from the God center, the individual 'knower' or ego disappears, though he warns against confusing this state with the unconsciousness induced by substances. Acharya Prashant advises that for an ordinary seeker, the way forward is to observe with honesty and determination why they are acting. By investigating the 'why' of an action, one discovers the 'doer'—a false entity that assumes the individual's name to carry out mischief. He describes the process of catching this false thinker or 'little false I' as a necessary and even enjoyable practice. The essence of the teaching is to reject what arises from personal smartness and cleverness, as only that which comes from the truth is genuinely good.